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1.
This work reports for the first time a resonance Raman study of the mixed-valence and fully reduced forms of Paracoccus pantotrophus bacterial cytochrome c peroxidase. The spectra of the active mixed-valence enzyme show changes in the structure of the ferric peroxidatic heme compared to the fully oxidized enzyme; these differences are observed upon reduction of the electron-transferring heme and upon full occupancy of the calcium site. For the mixed-valence form in the absence of Ca(2+), the peroxidatic heme is six-coordinate and low-spin on the basis of the frequencies of the structure-sensitive Raman lines: the enzyme is inactive. With added Ca(2+), the peroxidatic heme is five-coordinate high-spin and active. The calcium-dependent spectral differences indicate little change in the conformation of the ferrous electron-transferring heme, but substantial changes in the conformation of the ferric peroxidatic heme. Structural changes associated with Ca(2+) binding are indicated by spectral differences in the structure-sensitive marker lines, the out-of-plane low-frequency macrocyclic modes, and the vibrations associated with the heme substituents of that heme. The Ca(2+)-dependent appearance of a strong gamma 15 saddling-symmetry mode for the mixed-valence form is consistent with a strong saddling deformation in the active peroxidatic heme, a feature seen in the Raman spectra of other peroxidases. For the fully reduced form in the presence of Ca(2+), the resonance Raman spectra show that the peroxidatic heme remains high-spin.  相似文献   

2.
The extent to which the structural Ca(2+) ions of horseradish peroxidase (HRPC) are a determinant in defining the heme pocket architecture is investigated by electronic absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopy upon removal of one Ca(2+) ion. The Fe(III) heme states are modified upon Ca(2+) depletion, with an uncommon quantum mechanically mixed spin state becoming the dominant species. Ca(2+)-depleted HRPC forms complexes with benzohydroxamic acid and CO which display spectra very similar to those of native HRPC, indicating that any changes to the distal cavity structural properties upon Ca(2+) depletion are easily reversed. Contrary to the native protein, the Ca(2+)-depleted ferrous form displays a low-spin bis-histidyl heme state and a small proportion of high-spin heme. Furthermore, the nu(Fe-Im) stretching mode downshifts 27 cm(-1) upon Ca(2+) depletion revealing a significant structural perturbation of the proximal cavity near the histidine ligand. The specific activity of the Ca(2+)-depleted enzyme is 50% that of the native form. The effects on enzyme activity and spectral features observed upon Ca(2+) depletion are reversible upon reconstitution. Evaluation of the present and previous data firmly favors the proximal Ca(2+) ion as that which is lost upon Ca(2+) depletion and which likely plays the more critical role in regulating the heme pocket structural and catalytic properties.  相似文献   

3.
The reaction between mixed-valence (MV) cytochrome c oxidase from beef heart with H2O2 was investigated using the flow-flash technique with a high concentration of H2O2 (1 M) to ensure a fast bimolecular interaction with the enzyme. Under anaerobic conditions the reaction exhibits 3 apparent phases. The first phase (tau congruent with 25 micros) results from the binding of one molecule of H2O2 to reduced heme a3 and the formation of an intermediate which is heme a3 oxoferryl (Fe4+=O2-) with reduced CuB (plus water). During the second phase (tau congruent with 90 micros), the electron transfer from CuB+ to the heme oxoferryl takes place, yielding the oxidized form of cytochrome oxidase (heme a3 Fe3+ and CuB2+, plus hydroxide). During the third phase (tau congruent with 4 ms), an additional molecule of H2O2 binds to the oxidized form of the enzyme and forms compound P, similar to the product observed upon the reaction of the mixed-valence (i.e., two-electron reduced) form of the enzyme with dioxygen. Thus, within about 30 ms the reaction of the mixed-valence form of the enzyme with H2O2 yields the same compound P as does the reaction with dioxygen, as indicated by the final absorbance at 436 nm, which is the same in both cases. This experimental approach allows the investigation of the form of cytochrome c oxidase which has the heme a3 oxoferryl intermediate but with reduced CuB. This state of the enzyme cannot be obtained from the reaction with dioxygen and is potentially useful to address questions concerning the role of the redox state in CuB in the proton pumping mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
The structure and activity of native horseradish peroxidase C (HRP) is stabilized by two bound Ca(2+) ions. Earlier studies suggested a critical role of one of the bound Ca(2+) ions but with conflicting conclusions concerning their respective importance. In this work we compare the native and totally Ca(2+)-depleted forms of the enzyme using pH-, pressure-, viscosity- and temperature-dependent UV absorption, CD, H/D exchange-FTIR spectroscopy and by binding the substrate benzohydroxamic acid (BHA). We report that Ca(2+)-depletion does not change the alpha helical content of the protein, but strongly modifies the tertiary structure and dynamics to yield a homogeneously loosened molten globule-like structure. We relate observed tertiary changes in the heme pocket to changes in the dipole orientation and coordination of a distal water molecule. Deprotonation of distal His42, linked to Asp43, itself coordinated to the distal Ca(2+), perturbs a H-bonding network connecting this Ca(2+) to the heme crevice that involves the distal water. The measured effects of Ca(2)(+) depletion can be interpreted as supporting a structural role for the distal Ca(2+) and for its enhanced significance in finetuning the protein structure to optimize enzyme activity.  相似文献   

5.
We previously characterized the structural features of the interaction of sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes with nonsolubilizing concentrations of C12E8, the non-ionic detergent octaethylene glycol monododecyl ether (Andersen, J.P., le Maire, M., Kragh-Hansen, V., Champeil, P., and M?ller, J. V. (1983) Eur. J. Biochem. 134, 205-214). The present study characterizes especially the functional aspects and implications of the detergent-induced perturbation for an understanding of ATPase function. Perturbing detergent decreased Vmax, but left Ca2+ transport intact. Detergent incorporation affected neither the calcium-dependent phosphorylation from ATP, as judged from multimixer quenching experiments, nor the calcium-releasing transition between the two phosphoenzyme forms (Ca2E1P to E2P), as judged from kinetically resolved dual-wavelength measurements with the calcium-sensitive dye antipyrylazo III. However, the decrease in Vmax was accounted for by a decrease in the rate of enzyme dephosphorylation by a factor of 3-4, whereas the Ca2+-dependent transition between the nonphosphorylated enzyme forms (E2 to Ca2E1) was enhanced almost 10-fold. Evidence of a conformational change of E2 by C12E8 toward that of the E1 state to account for the perturbed reactions was obtained from experiments on vanadate reactivity and tryptic degradation pattern. Both direct and steady-state evidence was obtained for an acceleration by ATP of the Ca2E1P to E2P transition which may account for the low affinity modulatory effect of the nucleotide on enzyme turnover. The kinetic data indicated that reduction of ATP hydrolysis by C12E8 coincided with conditions where E2P dephosphorylation becomes rate-limiting (high ATP concentration, low pH, absence of potassium). Otherwise, the Ca2E1P to E2P transition is deduced to be a rate-limiting step for the ATPase cycle, whereas the potential for rate control of the cycle by modulation of the E2 to Ca2E1 transition is very small. Only in special circumstances (absence of potassium, high temperature, and using ITP as a substrate) did this transition become a rate-limiting step, subject to rate enhancement of the whole cycle by detergent perturbation.  相似文献   

6.
Transglutaminase (TGase) enzymes catalyze the formation of covalent cross-links between protein-bound glutamines and lysines in a calcium-dependent manner, but the role of Ca(2+) ions remains unclear. The TGase 3 isoform is widely expressed and is important for epithelial barrier formation. It is a zymogen, requiring proteolysis for activity. We have solved the three-dimensional structures of the zymogen and the activated forms at 2.2 and 2.1 A resolution, respectively, and examined the role of Ca(2+) ions. The zymogen binds one ion tightly that cannot be exchanged. Upon proteolysis, the enzyme exothermally acquires two more Ca(2+) ions that activate the enzyme, are exchangeable and are functionally replaceable by other lanthanide trivalent cations. Binding of a Ca(2+) ion at one of these sites opens a channel which exposes the key Trp236 and Trp327 residues that control substrate access to the active site. Together, these biochemical and structural data reveal for the first time in a TGase enzyme that Ca(2+) ions induce structural changes which at least in part dictate activity and, moreover, may confer substrate specificity.  相似文献   

7.
Femtosecond spectroscopy was performed on CO-liganded (fully reduced and mixed-valence states) and O(2)-liganded quinol oxidase bd from Escherichia coli. Substantial polarization effects, unprecedented for optical studies of heme proteins, were observed in the CO photodissociation spectra, implying interactions between heme d (the chlorin ligand binding site) and the close-lying heme b(595) on the picosecond time scale; this general result is fully consistent with previous work [Vos, M. H., Borisov, V. B., Liebl, U., Martin, J.-L., and Konstantinov, A. A. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 97, 1554-1559]. Analysis of the data obtained under isotropic and anisotropic polarization conditions and additional flash photolysis nanosecond experiments on a mutant of cytochrome bd mostly lacking heme b(595) allow to attribute the features in the well-known but unusual CO dissociation spectrum of cytochrome bd to individual heme d and heme b(595) transitions. This renders it possible to compare the spectra of CO dissociation from reduced and mixed-valence cytochrome bd under static conditions and on a picosecond time scale in much more detail than previously possible. CO binding/dissociation from heme d is shown to perturb ferrous heme b(595), causing induction/loss of an absorption band centered at 435 nm. In addition, the CO photodissociation-induced absorption changes at 50 ps reveal a bathochromic shift of ferrous heme b(595) relative to the static spectrum. No evidence for transient binding of CO to heme b(595) after dissociation from heme d is found in the picosecond time range. The yield of CO photodissociation from heme d on a time scale of < 15 ps is found to be diminished more than 3-fold when heme b(595) is oxidized rather than reduced. In contrast to other known heme proteins, molecular oxygen cannot be photodissociated from the mixed-valence cytochrome bd at all, indicating a unique structural and electronic configuration of the diheme active site in the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Some properties (catalytic and hemolytic activity, pH and temperature optima, stability, substrate specificity, effects of detergents and metal ions, N-terminal sequence, chemical modification of histidine in the enzyme active center, etc.) of phospholipase A2 from hornet (Vespa orientalis) venom were studied. It was shown that phospholipase A2 from hornet venom differs essentially from other enzymes of this species in terms of stability, catalytic properties and structural features. The active center of the enzyme contains an essential histidine residue, similar to other phospholipases A2 from various sources. Unlike other known forms of phospholipase A2, the enzyme under study exerts a pronounced hemolytic action. The hemolysis is inhibited by Ca2+ at concentrations capable of inducing the activation of the hydrolytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The inhibition of soluble guanylyl cyclase by Ca2+ has been kinetically characterized and the results support a two-metal-ion catalytic mechanism for formation of cGMP. Ca2+ reversibly inhibits both the basal and NO-stimulated forms of bovine lung soluble guanylyl cyclase. Inhibition is independent of the activator identity and concentration, revealing that Ca2+ interacts with a site independent of the heme regulatory site. Inhibition by Ca2+ is competitive with respect to Mg2+ in excess of substrate, with Kis values of 29 +/- 4 and 6.6 +/- 0.6 microM for the basal and activated states, respectively. Ca2+ inhibits noncompetitively with respect to the substrate MgGTP in both activity states. The qualitatively similar inhibition pattern and quantitatively different Ki values between the basal and NO-stimulated states suggest that the Ca2+ binding site undergoes some structural modification upon activation of the enzyme. The competitive nature of Ca2+ inhibition with respect to excess Mg2+ is consistent with a two-metal-ion mechanism for cyclization.  相似文献   

10.
Nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) catalyzes the formation of NO and citrulline from l-arginine and oxygen. However, the NO so formed has been found to auto-inhibit the enzymatic activity significantly. We hypothesized that the NO reactivity is in part controlled by hydrogen bonding between the conserved tryptophan residue (position 409 in the neuronal isoform of NOS (nNOS)) and the cysteine residue that forms the proximal bond to the heme. By using resonance Raman spectroscopy and NO as a probe of the heme environment, we show that in the W409F and W409Y mutants of the oxygenase domain of the neuronal enzyme (nNOSox), the Fe-NO bond in the Fe3+NO complex is weaker than in the wild type enzyme, consistent with the loss of a hydrogen bond on the sulfur atom of the proximal cysteine residue. The weaker Fe-NO bond in the W409F and W409Y mutants might result in a faster rate of NO dissociation from the ferric heme in the Trp-409 mutants as compared with the wild type enzyme, which could contribute to the lower accumulation of the inhibitory NO-bound complexes observed during catalysis with the Trp-409 mutants (Adak, S., Crooks, C., Wang, Q., Crane, B. R., Tainer, J. A., Getzoff, E. D., and Stuehr, D. J. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 26907-26911). The optical and resonance Raman spectra of the Fe2+NO complexes of the Trp-409 mutants differ from those of the wild type enzyme and indicate that a significant population of a five-coordinate Fe2+NO complex is present. These data show that the hydrogen bond provided by the Trp-409 residue is necessary to maintain the thiolate coordination when NO binds to the ferrous heme. Taken together our results indicate that the heme environment on the proximal side of nNOS is critical for the formation of a stable iron-cysteine bond and for the control of the electronic properties of heme-NO complexes.  相似文献   

11.
The changes in the heme environment and overall structure occurring during reversible thermal inactivation and in denaturant guanidinium of Euphorbia characias latex peroxidase (ELP) were investigated in the presence and absence of calcium ions. Native active enzyme had an absorption spectrum typical of a quantum-mixed spin ferric heme protein. After 40 min at 60 degrees C ELP was fully inactivated showing the spectroscopic behavior of a pure hexacoordinate low-spin protein. The addition of Ca2+ to the thermally inactivated enzyme restored its native activity and its spectroscopic features, but did not increase the stability of the protein in guanidinium. It is concluded that, in Euphorbia peroxidase, Ca2+ ion play a key role in conferring structural stability to the heme environment and in retaining active site geometry.  相似文献   

12.
Using [U-14C]phosphatidylinositol as substrate, Ca2+-dependent phospholipase C activity was detected in a group of bovine adrenal medullary proteins that bind to chromaffin granule membranes in the presence of Ca2+ ("chromobindins," Creutz, C. E., Dowling, L. G., Sando, J. J., Villar-Palasi, C., Whipple, J. H., and Zaks, W. J. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14664-14674). The activity was maximal at neutral pH and represented an 80- to 240-fold enrichment of adrenal medullary cytosol phospholipase C activity measured at pH 7.3. The stimulation of activity by Ca2+ was complex; no activity was present in the absence of Ca2+, 25% activation occurred at 1 microM Ca2+, and full activation at 5 mM Ca2+. The enzyme bound to chromaffin granule membranes in the presence of 2 mM Ca2+ but was released at 40 microM Ca2+, suggesting that intrinsic enzyme activity may be regulated by [Ca2+] at 1 microM, but additional activation at higher concentrations of Ca2+ is seen in vitro as a result of Ca2+-dependent binding of the active enzyme to substrate-containing membranes. This enzyme may generate diacylglycerol and phosphorylated inositol to act as intracellular messengers in the vicinity of the chromaffin granule membrane during the process of exocytosis.  相似文献   

13.
A synthetic tRNA precursor analog containing the structural elements of Escherichia coli tRNA(Phe) was characterized as a substrate for E. coli ribonuclease P and for M1 RNA, the catalytic RNA subunit. Processing of the synthetic precursor exhibited a Mg2+ dependence quite similar to that of natural tRNA precursors such as E. coli tRNA(Tyr) precursor. It was found that Sr2+, Ca2+, and Ba2+ ions promoted processing of the dimeric precursor at Mg2+ concentrations otherwise insufficient to support processing; very similar behavior was noted for E. coli tRNA(Tyr). As noted previously for natural tRNA precursors, the absence of the 3'-terminal CA sequence in the synthetic precursor diminished the facility of processing of this substrate by RNase P and M1 RNA. A study of the Mg2+ dependence of processing of the synthetic tRNA dimeric substrate radiolabeled between C75 and A76 provided unequivocal evidence for an alteration in the actual site of processing by E. coli RNase P as a function of Mg2+ concentration. This property was subsequently demonstrated to obtain (Carter, B. J., Vold, B.S., and Hecht, S. M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7100-7103) for a mutant Bacillus subtilis tRNAHis precursor containing a potential A-C base pair at the end of the acceptor stem.  相似文献   

14.
The irreversible thermal inactivation of Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylase was studied. A two-step behaviour in the irreversible denaturation process was found. Our experimental results are consistent only with the two-step model and rule out the two-isoenzyme one. They suggest that the deactivation mechanism involves the existence of a temperature-dependent intermediate form. Therefore the enzyme could exist in a great number of active conformational states. We have shown that Ca2+ is necessary for the structural integrity of alpha-amylase. Indeed, dialysis against chelating agents leads to a reversible enzyme inactivation, though molecular sieving has no effect. Further, the key role of Ca2+ in the alpha-amylase thermostability is reported. The stabilizing effect of Ca2+ is reflected by the decrease of the denaturation constants of both the native and the intermediate forms. Below 75 degrees C, in the presence of 5 mM-CaCl2, alpha-amylase is completely thermostable. Neither other metal ions nor substrate have a positive effect on enzyme thermostability. The effect of temperature on the native enzyme and on one intermediate form was studied. Both forms exhibit the same optimum temperature. Identical activation parameters for the hydrolytic reaction catalysed by these two forms were found.  相似文献   

15.
Characterization of Brain Calpains   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
A new, simple one-step procedure [Karlsson et al. Biochem. J. 231, 201-204 (1985)] for the separation of calpains I and II was used prior to the characterization of these enzymes from rabbit brain, using alkali-denatured casein as the substrate. Enzyme activity was dependent on Ca2+ ions and free-SH groups and was maximal around pH 7.4. Incubation of calpains I and II with Ca2+ in the absence of substrate led to a rapid loss of enzyme activity. Enzyme activity was linear at room temperature and millimolar Ca2+ concentrations. However, when incubation of calpain I was performed with micromolar Ca2+ concentrations at room temperature proteolytic activity exhibited a lag period of approximately 10 min. This activation period was not as evident with calpain II.  相似文献   

16.
Arginase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae has long been known to be a metal ion-requiring enzyme as it requires heating at 45 degrees C in the presence of 10 mM Mn2+ for catalytic activation. Metals are also thought to play a structural role in the enzyme, but the identity of the structural metal and its precise structural role have not been defined. Analysis of the metal ions that bind to yeast arginase by atomic absorption spectroscopy reveals that there is a weakly associated Mn2+ that binds to the trimeric enzyme with a stoichiometry of 1.04 +/- 0.05 mol of Mn2+ bound per subunit and an apparent K'D value of 26 microM at pH 7.0 and 4 degrees C. A more tightly associated Zn2+ ion can only be removed by dialysis against chelating agents. In occasional preparations, this site contained some Mn2+; however, Zn2+ and Mn2+ together bind to high affinity sites with a stoichiometry of 1.14 +/- 0.25/mol of subunit. Both the loosely associated catalytic Mn2+ ion and the more tightly associated structural Zn2+ ion confer stability to the enzyme. Removal of the weakly bound Mn2+ ion results in a 3 degree C decrease in the midpoint of the thermal transition (T 1/2) (from 57 by 54 degrees C) as monitored by UV difference absorption spectroscopy. Removal of the tightly bound Zn2+ ion produces a 19 degrees C decrease in T 1/2 (to 38 degrees C). Similar results are obtained by circular dichroism measurements. When the Zn2+ ion is removed, the steady-state fluorescence intensity increases 100% as compared to the holoenzyme, with a shift in the emission maximum from 337 to 352 nm. This suggests that in the folded trimeric metalloenzyme, the tryptophan fluorescence is quenched and that upon removal of the structural metal, the quenching is relieved as tryptophan residues become exposed to more polar environments. Equilibrium sedimentation experiments performed after dialysis of the enzyme against EDTA demonstrate that arginase exists in a reversible monomer-trimer equilibrium, in the absence of metal ions, with a KD value of 5.05 x 10(-11) M2. In contrast, the native enzyme exists as a trimer with no evidence of dissociation when Mn2+ and Zn2+ are present (Eisenstein, E., Duong, L.T., Ornberg, R. L., Osborne, J.C., Jr., and Hensley, P. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 12814-12819). In summary, the study presented here demonstrates that binding of a weakly bound Mn2+ ion confers catalytic activity. In contrast, binding of a more tightly associated Zn2+ ion confers substantial stability to the tertiary and quaternary structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of vanadate ions with the Ca-ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles was studied in a native and a fluorescein-labeled ATPase preparation (Pick, U., and Karlish, S. J. D. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 626, 255-261). Vanadate induced a fluorescence enhancement in a fluorescein-labeled enzyme, indicating that it shifts the equilibrium between the two conformational states of the enzyme by forming a stable E2-Mg-vanadate complex (E2 is the low affinity Ca2+ binding conformational state of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase). Indications for tight binding of vanadate to the enzyme (K1/2 = 10 microM) in the absence of Ca2+ and for a slow dissociation of vanadate from the enzyme in the presence of Ca2+ are presented. The enzyme-vanadate complex was identified by the appearance of a time lag in the onset of Ca2+ uptake and by a slowing of the fluorescence quenching response to Ca2+. Ca2+ prevented the binding of vanadate to the enzyme. Pyrophosphate (Kd = 2 mM) and ATP (Kd = 25 microM) competitively inhibited the binding of vanadate, indicating that vanadate binds to the low affinity ATP binding site. Binding of vanadate inhibited the high affinity Ca2+ binding to the enzyme at 4 degrees C. Vanadate also inhibited the phosphorylation reaction by inorganic phosphate (Ki = 10 microM) but had no effect on the phosphorylation by ATP. It is suggested that vanadate binds to a special region in the low affinity ATP binding site which is exposed only in the E2 conformation of the enzyme in the absence of Ca2+ and which controls the rate of the conformation transition in the dephosphorylated enzyme. The implications of these results to the role of the low affinity ATP binding sites are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) from R. sphaeroides contains one Ca(2+) ion per enzyme that is not removed by dialysis versus EGTA. This is similar to COX from Paracoccus denitrificans [Pfitzner, U., Kirichenko, A., Konstantinov, A. A., Mertens, M., Wittershagen, A., Kolbesen, B. O., Steffens, G. C. M., Harrenga, A., Michel, H., and Ludwig, B. (1999) FEBS Lett. 456, 365-369] and is in contrast to the bovine oxidase, which binds Ca(2+) reversibly. A series of R. sphaeroides mutants with replacements of the E54, Q61, and D485 residues, which form the Ca(2+) coordination sphere in subunit I, has been generated. The substitutions for the E54 residue do not assemble normally. Mutants with the Q61 replacements are active and retain the tightly bound Ca(2+); their spectra are not perturbed by added Ca(2+) or EGTA. The D485A mutant is active, binds to Ca(2+) reversibly, like the mitochondrial oxidase, and exhibits the red shift in the heme a absorption spectrum upon Ca(2+) binding for both reduced and oxidized states of heme a. The K(d) value of 6 nM determined by equilibrium titrations is much lower than that reported for the homologous D477A mutant of Paracoccus denitrificans or for bovine COX (K(d) = 1-3 microM). The rate of Ca(2+) binding with the D485A oxidase (k(on) = 5 x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1)) is comparable to that observed earlier for bovine COX, but the off-rate is extremely slow (approximately 10(-3) s(-1)) and highly temperature-dependent. The k(off) /k(on) ratio (190 nM) is about 30-fold higher than the equilibrium K(d) of 6 nM, indicating that formation of the Ca(2+)-adduct may involve more than one step. Sodium ions reverse the Ca(2+)-induced red shift of heme a and dramatically decrease the rate of Ca(2+) binding to the D485A mutant COX. With the D485A mutant, 1 Ca(2+) competes with 1 Na(+) for the binding site, whereas 2 Na(+) compete with 1 Ca(2+) for binding to the bovine oxidase. This finding indicates that the aspartic residue D442 (a homologue of R. sphaeroides D485) may be the second Na(+) binding site in bovine COX. No effect of Ca(2+) binding to the D485A mutant is evident on either the steady-state enzymatic activity or several time-resolved partial steps of the catalytic cycle. It is proposed that the tightly bound Ca(2+) plays a structural role in the bacterial oxidases while the reversible binding with the mammalian enzyme may be involved in the regulation of mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

19.
J Baillon  P Tauc  G Hervé 《Biochemistry》1985,24(25):7182-7187
L-Alanosine, an antibiotic produced by Streptomyces alanosinicus, can be used by Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase as a substrate instead of L-aspartate. The Michaelis constant of the catalytic subunit for this analogue is about 10 times higher than that for the physiological substrate, and the catalytic constant is about 30 times lower. The saturation curve of the native enzyme for L-alanosine indicates the lack of homotropic cooperative interactions between the catalytic sites for the utilization of this compound. It appears therefore that L-alanosine is unable to promote the allosteric transition. However, N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-aspartate, a "bisubstrate analogue" of the physiological substrates, stimulates the reaction. This phenomenon is very similar to that reported by Foote and Lipscomb [Foote, J., & Lipscomb, W. N. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 11428-11433] concerning the reverse reaction using carbamylaspartate. The reaction is normally sensitive to the physiological effectors ATP and CTP. The significance of these results for the mechanism of the allosteric regulation is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
N Lee  H Suga 《Biochemistry》2001,40(45):13633-13643
Numerous studies on naturally occurring ribozymes have shown that the functional roles of metal ions in promoting RNA catalysis are diverse. Earlier studies performed on the in vitro selected aminoacyl-transferase ribozyme (ATRib) have revealed that a fully hydrated Mg2+ ion plays an essential role in catalysis [Suga, H., Cowan, J. A., and Szostak, J. W. (1998) Biochemistry 28, 10118-10125]. More recently, we have evolved this ATRib into a bifunctional ribozyme, called AD02 [Lee, N., et al. (2000) Nat. Struct. Biol. 7, 28-33]. This new ribozyme consists of two catalytic domains, the original ATRib domain and a new glutamine-recognition (QR) domain, and exhibits a function of charging glutamine to tRNA. Here we elucidate crucial roles of metal ions involved in the QR domain, that are distinct from those in the ATRib domain. The metal ions in the QR domain require innersphere coordinations, and both Mg2+ and Ca2+ can support catalysis. Extensive Tb3+-Mg2+ and Tb3+-Co(NH3)6(3+) competition cleavage experiments have shown that the QR domain has high and low affinity metal binding sites, which are involved in the Mg2+-dependent structural alteration to form the glutamine binding site [Lee, N., and Suga, H. (2001) RNA 7, 1043-1051]. Kinetic studies in the presence of divalent and monovalent ions have suggested that the essential role of the metal ions in the QR domain is most likely structural.  相似文献   

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