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1.
Zhao G  Song H  Chen ZW  Mathews FS  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9751-9764
Conservative mutation of His269 (to Asn, Ala, or Gln) does not-significantly affect the expression of monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX), covalent flavinylation, the physicochemical properties of bound FAD, or the overall protein structure. Turnover with sarcosine and the limiting rate of the reductive half-reaction with L-proline at pH 8.0 are, however, nearly 2 orders of magnitude slower than that with with wild-type MSOX. The crystal structure of the His269Asn complex with pyrrole-2-carboxylate shows that the pyrrole ring of the inhibitor is displaced as compared with wild-type MSOX. The His269 mutants all form charge-transfer complexes with pyrrole-2-carboxylate or methylthioacetate, but the charge-transfer bands are shifted to shorter wavelengths (higher energy) as compared with wild-type MSOX. Both wild-type MSOX and the His269Asn mutant bind the zwitterionic form of L-proline. The E(ox).L-proline complex formed with the His269Asn mutant or wild-type MSOX contains an ionizable group (pK(a) = 8.0) that is required for conversion of the zwitterionic L-proline to the reactive anionic form, indicating that His269 is not the active-site base. We propose that the change in ligand orientation observed upon mutation of His269 results in a less than optimal overlap of the highest occupied orbital of the ligand with the lowest unoccupied orbital of the flavin. The postulated effect on orbital overlap may account for the increased energy of charge-transfer bands and the slower rates of electron transfer observed for mutant enzyme complexes with charge-transfer ligands and substrates, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) contains covalently bound FAD and catalyzes the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine ( N-methylglycine). The side chain of Arg49 is in van der Waals contact with the si face of the flavin ring; sarcosine binds just above the re face. Covalent flavin attachment requires a basic residue (Arg or Lys) at position 49. Although flavinylation is scarcely affected, mutation of Arg49 to Lys causes a 40-fold decrease in k cat and a 150-fold decrease in k cat/ K m sarcosine. The overall structure of the Arg49Lys mutant is very similar to wild-type MSOX; the side chain of Lys49 in the mutant is nearly congruent to that of Arg49 in the wild-type enzyme. The Arg49Lys mutant exhibits several features consistent with a less electropositive active site: (1) Charge transfer bands observed for mutant enzyme complexes with competitive inhibitors absorb at higher energy than the corresponding wild-type complexes. (2) The p K a for ionization at N(3)H of FAD is more than two pH units higher in the mutant than in wild-type MSOX. (3) The reduction potential of the oxidized/radical couple in the mutant is 100 mV lower than in the wild-type enzyme. The lower reduction potential is likely to be a major cause of the reduced catalytic activity of the mutant. Electrostatic interactions with Arg49 play an important role in catalysis and covalent flavinylation. A context-sensitive model for the electrostatic impact of an arginine to lysine mutation can account for the dramatically different consequences of the Arg49Lys mutation on MSOX catalysis and holoenzyme biosysnthesis.  相似文献   

3.
Tyr-169 in trimethylamine dehydrogenase is one component of a triad also comprising residues His-172 and Asp-267. Its role in catalysis and in mediating the magnetic interaction between FMN cofactor and the 4Fe/4S center have been investigated by stopped-flow and EPR spectroscopy of a Tyr-169 to Phe (Y169F) mutant of the enzyme. Tyr-169 is shown to play an important role in catalysis (mutation to phenylalanine reduces the limiting rate constant for bleaching of the active site flavin by about 100-fold) but does not serve as a general base in the course of catalysis. In addition, we are able to resolve two kinetically influential ionizations involved in both the reaction of free enzyme with free substrate (as reflected in klim/Kd), and in the breakdown of the Eox.S complex (as reflected in klim). In EPR studies of the Y169F mutant, it is found that the ability of the Y169F enzyme to form the spin-interacting state between flavin semiquinone and reduced 4Fe/4S center characteristic of wild-type enzyme is significantly compromised. The present results are consistent with Tyr-169 representing the ionizable group of pKa approximately 9.5, previously identified in pH-jump studies of electron transfer, whose deprotonation must occur for the spin-interacting state to be established.  相似文献   

4.
Zhao G  Jorns MS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(31):9747-9750
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) contains covalently bound FAD and catalyzes the oxidation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and other secondary amino acids, including L-proline. The reductive half-reaction with L-proline proceeds via a rapidly attained equilibrium (K(d)) between free E(ox) and the E(ox).S complex, followed by a practically irreversible reduction step (E(ox).S --> E(red).P) associated with a rate constant, k(lim). The effect of pH on the reductive half-reaction shows that the K(d) for L-proline binding is pH-independent (pH 6.46-9.0). This indicates that MSOX binds the zwitterionic form of L-proline, the predominant species in solution at neutral pH (pK(a) = 10.6). Values for the limiting rate of reduction (k(lim)) are, however, strongly pH-dependent and indicate that an ionizable group in the E(ox).L-proline complex (pK(a) = 8.02) must be unprotonated for conversion to E(red).P. Charge-transfer interaction with L-proline as the donor and FAD as acceptor is possible only with the anionic form of L-proline. The ionizable group in the E(ox).L-proline complex is required for conversion of enzyme-bound L-proline from the zwitterionic to the reactive anionic form, as judged by the independently determined pK(a) for charge-transfer complex formation with the MSOX flavin (pK(a) = 7.94). The observation that the anionic form of L-proline with a neutral amino group is the reactive species in the reduction of MSOX is similar to that observed for other flavoenzymes that oxidize amines, including monoamine oxidase and trimethylamine dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

5.
The oxygen transfer to p-hydroxybenzoate catalyzed by p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) has been shown to occur via a C4a-hydroperoxide of the flavin. Two factors are likely to be important in facilitating the transfer of oxygen from the C4a-hydroperoxide to the substrate. (a) The positive electrostatic potential of the active site partially stabilizes the negative charge centered on the oxygen of the flavin-C4a-alkoxide leaving group during the transition state [Ortiz-Maldonado, M., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 8124-8137]. (b) The hydrogen-bonding network ionizes the substrate to promote its nucleophilic attack on the electrophilic C4a-hydroperoxide intermediate [Entsch, B., Palfey, B. A., Ballou, D. P., and Massey, V. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 17341-17349]. This ionization is also aided by the positive electrostatic potential of the active site [Moran, G. R., Entsch, B., Palfey, B. A., and Ballou, D. P. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 7548-7556]. Substituents on the flavin can specifically affect the stability of the alkoxide leaving-group, whereas changes to specific enzyme residues can affect the charge in the active site and the hydrogen-bonding network. We have used wild-type (WT) PHBH and several mutant forms, all with normal FAD and with 8-Cl-FAD substituted for FAD, to assess the relative contributions of the two effects. Lys297Met and Asn300Asp have decreased positive charge in the active site, and these variants engender approximately 35-fold slower hydroxylation rates than the WT enzyme. Substitution of 8-Cl-FAD in these mutant forms gives approximately 1.8-fold increases in hydroxylation rates, compared with a > or =4.8-fold increase for WT with this flavin. The hydroxylation catalyzed by Tyr385Phe, a mutant enzyme form with a disrupted hydrogen-bonding network that compromises the ionization of the substrate without changing the positive charge of the active site, is stimulated 1.5-fold by substituting the enzyme with 8-Cl-FAD. The substrate, tetrafluoro-p-hydroxybenzoate, is fully ionized in WT PHBH, but this phenolate is a poor nucleophile because of the electron-withdrawing effects of the fluorine substituents. With tetrafluoro-p-hydroxybenzoate as the substrate, substitution of FAD with 8-Cl-FAD in the WT enzyme stabilizes the leaving alkoxide and leads to a 2.3-fold increase in the hydroxylation rate compared to that with FAD. Either the use of substrates that do not communicate with the proton network or the mutation of amino acid residues that perturb this interaction may prevent a necessary conformational change that allows proper orientation between reactants during the hydroxylation reaction or permits the essential protonation of the initially formed nascent flavin-C4a-peroxide anion. Thus, both activation of substrate by the proton network and stabilization of the leaving alkoxide appear to be important for oxygen transfer catalyzed by PHBH. The full effect of the substituents on the flavin (4.8-fold) can only be realized when the optimal transition state can be achieved, and this optimal state is not fully realized with the mutant forms.  相似文献   

6.
The family of FMN-dependent, alpha-hydroxy acid-oxidizing enzymes catalyzes substrate dehydrogenation by a mechanism the first step of which is abstraction of the substrate alpha-proton (so-called carbanion mechanism). For flavocytochrome b2 and lactate oxidase, it was shown that once on the enzyme this proton is lost only slowly to the solvent (Lederer F, 1984, In: Bray RC, Engel PC, Mayhew SG, eds, Flavins & flavoproteins, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter & Co., pp 513-526; Urban P, Lederer F, 1985, J Biol Chem 260:11115-11122). This suggested the occurrence of a pKa increase of the catalytic histidine upon enzyme reduction by substrate. For flavocytochrome b2, the crystal structure indicated 2 possible origins for the stabilization of the imidazolium form of His 373: either a network of hydrogen bonds involving His 373, Tyr 254, flavin N5 and O4, a heme propionate, and solvent molecules, and/or electrostatic interactions with Asp 282 and with the reduced cofactor N1 anion. In this work, we probe the effect of the hydrogen bond network at the active site by studying proton exchange with solvent for 2 mutants: Y254F and the recombinant flavodehydrogenase domain, in which this network should be disrupted. The rate of proton exchange, as determined by intermolecular hydrogen transfer experiments, appears identical in the flavodehydrogenase domain and the wild-type enzyme, whereas it is about 3-fold faster in the Y254F mutant. It thus appears that specific hydrogen bonds to the solvent do not play a major role in stabilizing the acid form of His 373 in reduced flavocytochrome b2. Removal of the Y254 phenol group induces a pKa drop of about half a pH unit for His 373 in the reduced enzyme. Even then, the rate of exchange of the imidazolium proton with solvent is still lower by several orders of magnitude than that of a normally ionizing histidine. Other factors must then also contribute to the pKa increase, such as the electrostatic interactions with D282 and the anionic reduced cofactor, as suggested by the crystal structure.  相似文献   

7.
Catalytic role of histidine 147 in Escherichia coli thymidylate synthase   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Nine mutant thymidylate synthases were isolated that only differed in sequence at position 147. The wild-type enzyme (which had a histidine residue at 147) and mutant enzymes were purified to near homogeneity and their kinetic properties were compared. Although the kcat values for the mutant enzymes were 10-10,000-fold lower than for the wild-type enzyme, the Km values for both 2'-deoxyuridylate and 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate were nearly identical for all the enzymes indicating that His-147 is not significantly involved in initial substrate binding. By comparing the wild-type (His-147) to the glycine (Gly-147) enzyme, the side chain of His-147 was estimated to lower the activation energy of the catalytic step by 1.6-2.9 kcal mol-1. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, the activity of the Gly-147 enzyme decreased when the pH was raised above 7.5. The activity loss coincided with the deprotonation of a residue that had a pKa of 9.46 +/- 0.2 and an enthalpy of ionization (delta Hion) of 12.1 +/- 0.9. These values are consistent with the involvement of a lysine or an arginine residue in the catalytic process. An inspection of the rates of ternary complex formation among enzyme, 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridylate, and 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate for the mutant enzymes indicated that His-147 is not needed for the proton removal from C-5 of 2'-deoxyuridylate but rather participates in an initial catalytic step and alters the pKa value of a catalytically important lysine or arginine residue.  相似文献   

8.
The pH-dependent kinetics of lysyl oxidase catalysis was examined for evidence of an ionizable enzyme residue which might function as a general base catalyzing proton abstraction previously shown to be a component of the mechanism of substrate processing by this enzyme. Plots of log Vmax/Km for the oxidation of n-hexylamine versus pH yielded pKa values of 7.0 +/- 0.1 and 10.4 +/- 0.1. The higher pKa varied with different substrates, reflecting ionization of the substrate amino group. A van't Hoff plot of the temperature dependence of the lower pKa yielded a value of 6.1 kcal mol-1 for the enthalpy of ionization. This value as well as the pKa of 7.0 are consistent with those of histidine residues previously implicated as general base catalysts in enzymes. Incubation of lysyl oxidase with low concentrations of diethyl pyrocarbonate, a histidine-selective reagent, at 22 degrees C and pH 7.0 irreversibly inhibited enzyme activity by a pseudo first-order kinetic process. The inactivation of lysyl oxidase correlated with spectral and pH-dependent kinetic evidence for the chemical modification of 1 histidine residue/mol of enzyme, the pKa of which was 6.9 +/- 0.1, within experimental error of that seen in the plot of log Vmax/Km versus pH. Enzyme activity was restored by incubation of the modified enzyme with hydroxylamine, consistent with the ability of this nucleophile to displace the carbethoxy group from N-carbethoxyhistidine. The presence of the n-hexylamine substrate largely protected against enzyme inactivation by diethyl pyrocarbonate. These results thus indicate a functional role for histidine in lysyl oxidase catalysis consistent with that of a general base in proton abstraction.  相似文献   

9.
Gerratana B  Cleland WW  Frey PA 《Biochemistry》2001,40(31):9187-9195
Escherichia coli dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase and UDP-galactose 4-epimerase are members of the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase SDR family. A highly conserved triad consisting of Ser/Thr, Tyr, and Lys is present in the active sites of these enzymes as well in other SDR proteins. Ser124, Tyr149, and Lys153 in the active site of UDP-galactose 4-epimerase are located in similar positions as the corresponding Thr134, Tyr160, and Lys164, in the active site of dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase. The role of these residues in the first hydride transfer step of the dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase mechanism has been studied by mutagenesis and steady-state kinetic analysis. In all mutants except T134S, the k(cat) values are more than 2 orders of magnitude lower than of wild-type enzyme. The substrate analogue, dTDP-xylose, was used to investigate the effects of the mutations on rate of the first hydride transfer step. The first step becomes significantly rate limiting upon mutation of Tyr160 to Phe and only partly rate limiting in the reaction catalyzed by K164M and T134A dehydratases. The pH dependence of k(cat), the steady-state NADH level, and the fraction of NADH formed with saturating dTDP-xylose show shifts in the pK(a) assigned to Tyr160 to more basic values by mutation of Lys164 and Thr134. The pK(a) of Tyr160, as determined by the pH dependence of NADH formation by dTDP-xylose, is 6.41. Lys164 and Thr134 are believed to play important roles in the stabilization of the anion of Tyr160 in a fashion similar to the roles of the corresponding residues in UDP-galactose 4-epimerase, which facilitate the ionization of Tyr149 in that enzyme [Liu, Y., et al. (1997) Biochemistry 35, 10675--10684]. Tyr160 is presumably the base for the first hydride transfer step, while Thr134 may relay a proton from the sugar to Tyr160.  相似文献   

10.
Buckman J  Miller SM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(34):10532-10541
EBP1-catalyzed reduction of alpha,beta-unsaturated ketones and aldehydes is proposed to proceed via transfer of hydride from the flavin to the beta-position of the olefinic bond, concomitant with or followed by uptake of a proton at the alpha-position. Structural analysis suggests that this proton is donated from Tyr206, and, hence, a protein was constructed in which it was replaced by phenylalanine. The mutation results in a slightly less stable protein than the wild type that nevertheless retains the fundamental flavin and phenol binding properties of EBP1 characterized previously. The pH profile for binding of phenol was characterized over the pH range 6.5-9.5 and was found to be simpler than that for the wild-type enzyme. Most importantly, a pK(a) of 8.7 that is perturbed to 9.4 upon binding of phenol to the wild-type enzyme is missing in the mutant, allowing assignment of this pK(a) to the Y206 hydroxyl group. Additionally, the pK(a) of phenol is further lowered from its value of 10.0 in solution to approximately 6.4 in the active site of the mutant, as compared to 7.1 in the wild type. Together, these perturbations lead to an increase of approximately 35-fold in the binding affinity of the mutant for phenol at high pH relative to the affinity of the wild-type enzyme. As expected, the mutation has little effect on the reductive half-reaction, in which a hydride equivalent is transferred from NADPH to the flavin. In contrast, the reduction of trans-2-hexenal by the reduced enzyme is significantly affected. The results indicate formation of a previously unobserved charge-transfer (CT) complex following formation of the Michaelis complex between substrate and reduced enzyme and preceding reduction of the substrate, which occurs at a greatly reduced rate (>/=440-fold) relative to wild type. Thus, while the oxidative half-reaction with wild-type enzyme is limited by the rate of formation of the CT complex, it is the chemical step that is rate-limiting in the reaction with EBP1:Y206F, consistent with the role of this residue as a general acid.  相似文献   

11.
In the active centre of pancreatic phospholipase A2 His48 is at hydrogen-bonding distance to Asp99. This Asp-His couple is assumed to act together with a water molecule as a catalytic triad. Asp99 is also linked via an extended hydrogen bonding system to the side chains of Tyr52 and Tyr73. To probe the function of the fully conserved Asp99, Tyr52 and Tyr73 residues in phospholipase A2, the Asp99 residue was replaced by Asn, and each of the two tyrosines was separately replaced by either a Phe or a Gln. The catalytic and binding properties of the Phe52 and Phe73 mutants did not change significantly relative to the wild-type enzyme. This rules out the possibility that either one of the two Tyr residues in the wild-type enzyme can function as an acyl acceptor or proton donor in catalysis. The Gln73 mutant could not be obtained in any significant amounts probably due to incorrect folding. The Gln52 mutant was isolated in low yield. This mutant showed a large decrease in catalytic activity while its substrate binding was nearly unchanged. The results suggest a structural role rather than a catalytic function of Tyr52 and Tyr73. Substitution of asparagine for aspartate hardly affects the binding constants for both monomeric and micellar substrate analogues. Kinetic characterization revealed that the Asn99 mutant has retained no less than 65% of its enzymatic activity on the monomeric substrate rac 1,2-dihexanoyldithio-propyl-3-phosphocholine, probably due to the fact that during hydrolysis of monomeric substrate by phospholipase A2 proton transfer is not the rate-limiting step.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The catalytic mechanism of epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) involves acid-assisted ring opening of the oxirane during the alkylation half-reaction of hydrolysis. Two tyrosyl residues in the active site of epoxide hydrolases have been shown to contribute to the catalysis of enzyme alkylation, but their mechanism of action has not been fully described. We have investigated the involvement of the active site Tyr154 and Tyr235 during S,S-trans-stilbene oxide hydrolysis catalyzed by potato epoxide hydrolase StEH1. Tyr phenol ionizations of unliganded enzyme as well as under pre-steady-state conditions during catalysis were studied by direct absorption spectroscopy. A transient UV absorption, indicative of tyrosinate formation, was detected during the lifetime of the alkyl-enzyme intermediate. The apparent pKa of Tyr ionization was 7.3, a value more than 3 pH units below the estimated pKa of protein Tyr residues in the unliganded enzyme. In addition, the pH dependencies of microscopic kinetic rates of catalyzed S,S-trans-stilbene oxide hydrolysis were determined. The alkylation rate increased with pH and displayed a pKa value identical to that of Tyr ionization (7.3), whereas the reverse (epoxidation) reaction did not display any pH dependence. The rate of alkyl-enzyme hydrolysis was inversely dependent on tyrosinate formation, decreasing with its buildup in the active site. Since alkyl-enzyme hydrolysis is the rate-limiting step of the overall reaction, kcat displayed the same decrease with pH as the hydrolysis rate. The compiled results suggested that the role of the Tyr154/Tyr235 pair was not as ultimate proton donor to the alkoxide anion but to stabilize the negatively charged alkyl-enzyme through electrophilic catalysis via hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

13.
Previously, we reported the importance of Tyr7 for the catalytic activity of human class Pi glutathione S-transferase [Kong et al. (1992) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm., 182, 1122]. As an extension of this study, we investigated the pH dependence of kinetic parameters of the wild-type enzyme and the Y7F mutant. The replacement of Tyr7 with phenylalanine was found to alter the pH dependence of Vmax and Vmax/KmCDNB of the enzyme for conjugation of GSH with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). The pKa of the thiol of GSH in the wild-type enzyme-GSH complex was estimated to be about 2.4 pK units lower than that in the Y7F-GSH complex. Tyr7 is thus considered to be important for catalytic activity in lowering the pKa of the thiol of GSH in the enzyme-GSH complex.  相似文献   

14.
Tu X  Hubbard PA  Kim JJ  Schulz H 《Biochemistry》2008,47(4):1167-1175
NADPH-dependent 2,4-dienoyl-CoA reductase (DCR) is one of the auxiliary enzymes required for the beta-oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids. Mutants of Escherichia coli DCR were generated by site-directed mutagenesis to explore the molecular mechanism of this enzyme. The Tyr166Phe mutant, which was expected to be inactive due to the loss of its putative proton donor residue, exhibited 27% of the wild-type activity. However, the product of the reduction was 3-enoyl-CoA instead of 2-enoyl-CoA, the normal product. Glu164 seems to function as proton donor in the Tyr166Phe mutant, because the Tyr166Phe/ Glu164Gln double mutant was inactive whereas the Glu164Ala mutant exhibited low but significant activity. His252 is important for the efficient operation of Tyr166 because a His252Ala mutation by itself reduced the activity of DCR by 3 orders of magnitude, whereas the Tyr166Phe/His252Ala double mutation exhibited 4.4% of the wild-type activity. This data supports a mechanism that has Tyr166 with the assistance of His252 acting as proton donor in the wild-type enzyme to produce 2-enoyl-CoA, whereas Glu164 serves as the proton donor in the absence of Tyr166 to yield 3-enoyl-CoA. A Cys337Ala mutation, which resulted in the loss of most of the iron and acid-labile sulfur, decreased the reductase activity more than 1000-fold. This observation agrees with the proposed operation of an intramolecular electron transport chain that is essential for the effective catalysis of E. coli DCR.  相似文献   

15.
Recombinant house fly (Musca domestica) cytochrome P450 reductase has been purified by anion exchange and affinity chromatography. Steady-state kinetics of cytochrome c reductase activity revealed a random Bi-Bi mechanism with formation of a ternary P450 reductase-NADPH-electron acceptor complex as catalytic intermediate. NADP(H) binding is essential for fast hydride ion transfer to FAD, as well as for electron transfer from FMN to cytochrome c. Reduced cytochrome c had no effect on the enzyme activity, while NADP+ and 2'-AMP inhibited P450 reductase competitively with respect to NADPH and noncompetitively with respect to cytochrome c. The affinity of the P450 reductase to NADPH is 10 times higher than to NADP+ (Kd of 0.31 and 3.3 microM, respectively). Such an affinity change during catalysis could account for a +30 mV shift of the redox potential of FAD. Cys560 was substituted for Tyr by site-directed mutagenesis. This mutation decreased enzyme affinity to NADPH 35-fold by decreasing the bimolecular rate constant of nucleotide binding with no detectable effect on the kinetic mechanism. The affinity of the C560Y mutant enzyme to NADP+ decreased 9-fold compared to the wild-type enzyme, while the affinity to 2'-AMP was not significantly affected, suggesting that Cys560 is located in the nicotinamide binding site of the active, full-size enzyme in solution.  相似文献   

16.
We have previously reported that L-proline has cryoprotective activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A freeze-tolerant mutant with L-proline accumulation was recently shown to carry an allele of the PRO1 gene encoding gamma-glutamyl kinase, which resulted in a single amino acid substitution (Asp154Asn). Interestingly, this mutation enhanced the activities of gamma-glutamyl kinase and gamma-glutamyl phosphate reductase, both of which catalyze the first two steps of L-proline synthesis and which together may form a complex in vivo. Here, we found that the Asp154Asn mutant gamma-glutamyl kinase was more thermostable than the wild-type enzyme, which suggests that this mutation elevated the apparent activities of two enzymes through a stabilization of the complex. We next examined the gene dosage effect of three L-proline biosynthetic enzymes, including Delta(1)-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase, which converts Delta(1)-pyrroline-5-carboxylate into L-proline, on L-proline accumulation and freeze tolerance in a non-L-proline-utilizing strain. Overexpression of the wild-type enzymes has no influence on L-proline accumulation, which suggests that the complex is very unstable in nature. However, co-overexpression of the mutant gamma-glutamyl kinase and the wild-type gamma-glutamyl phosphate reductase was effective for L-proline accumulation, probably due to a stabilization of the complex. These results indicate that both enzymes, not Delta(1)-pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase, are rate-limiting enzymes in yeast cells. A high tolerance for freezing clearly correlated with higher levels of L-proline in yeast cells. Our findings also suggest that, in addition to its cryoprotective activity, intracellular L-proline could protect yeast cells from damage by oxidative stress. The approach described here provides a valuable method for breeding novel yeast strains that are tolerant of both freezing and oxidative stresses.  相似文献   

17.
On the basis of the X-ray crystal structure of scytalone dehydratase complexed with an active center inhibitor [Lundqvist, T., Rice, J., Hodge, C. N., Basarab, G. S., Pierce, J. and Lindqvist, Y. (1994) Structure (London) 2, 937-944], eight active-site residues were mutated to examine their roles in the catalytic mechanism. All but one residue (Lys73, a potential base in an anti elimination mechanism) were found to be important to catalysis or substrate binding. Steady-state kinetic parameters for the mutants support the native roles for the residues (Asn131, Asp31, His85, His110, Ser129, Tyr30, and Tyr50) within a syn elimination mechanism. Relative substrate specificities for the two physiological substrates, scytalone and veremelone, versus a Ser129 mutant help assign the orientation of the substrates within the active site. His85Asn was the most damaging mutation to catalysis consistent with its native roles as a general base and a general acid in a syn elimination. The additive effect of Tyr30Phe and Tyr50Phe mutations in the double mutant is consistent with their roles in protonating the substrate's carbonyl through a water molecule. Studies on a synthetic substrate, which has an anomeric carbon atom which can better stabilize a carbocation than the physiological substrate (vermelone), suggest that His110Asn prefers this substrate over vermelone in order to balance the mutation-imposed weakness in promoting the elimination of hydroxide from substrates. All mutant enzymes bound a potent active-site inhibitor in near 1:1 stoichiometry, thereby supporting their active-site integrity. An X-ray crystal structure of the Tyr50Phe mutant indicated that both active-site waters were retained, likely accounting for its residual catalytic activity. Steady-state kinetic parameters with deuterated scytalone gave kinetic isotope effects of 2.7 on kcat and 4.2 on kcat/Km, suggesting that steps after dehydration partially limit kcat. Pre-steady-state measurements of a single-enzyme turnover with scytalone gave a rate that was 6-fold larger than kcat. kcat/Km with scytalone has a pKa of 7.9 similar to the pKa value for the ionization of the substrate's C6 phenolic hydroxyl, whereas kcat was unaffected by pH, indicating that the anionic form of scytalone does not bind well to enzyme. With an alternate substrate having a pKa above 11, kcat/Km had a pKa of 9.3 likely due to the ionization of Tyr50. The non-enzyme-catalyzed rate of dehydration of scytalone was nearly a billion-fold slower than the enzyme-catalyzed rate at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The non-enzyme-catalyzed rate of dehydration of scytalone had a deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1.2 at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C, and scytalone incorporated deuterium from D2O in the C2 position about 70-fold more rapidly than the dehydration rate. Thus, scytalone dehydrates through an E1cb mechanism off the enzyme.  相似文献   

18.
The thermodynamics of binding of both the substrate glutathione (GSH) and the competitive inhibitor S-hexylglutathione to the mutant Y49F of human glutathione S-transferase (hGST P1-1), a key residue at the dimer interface, has been investigated by isothermal titration calorimetry and fluorescence spectroscopy. Calorimetric measurements indicated that the binding of these ligands to both the Y49F mutant and wild-type enzyme is enthalpically favorable and entropically unfavorable over the temperature range studied. The affinity of these ligands for the Y49F mutant is lower than those for the wild-type enzyme due mainly to an entropy change. Therefore, the thermodynamic effect of this mutation is to decrease the entropy loss due to binding. Calorimetric titrations in several buffers with different ionization heat amounts indicate a release of protons when the mutant binds GSH, whereas protons are taken up in binding S-hexylglutathione at pH 6.5. This suggests that the thiol group of GSH releases protons to buffer media during binding and a group with low pKa (such as Asp98) is responsible for the uptake of protons. The temperature dependence of the free energy of binding, DeltaG0, is weak because of the enthalpy-entropy compensation caused by a large heat capacity change. The heat capacity change is -199.5 +/- 26.9 cal K-1 mol-1 for GSH binding and -333.6 +/- 28.8 cal K-1 mol-1 for S-hexylglutathione binding. The thermodynamic parameters are consistent with the mutation Tyr49 --> Phe, producing a slight conformational change in the active site.  相似文献   

19.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) is an inducible bacterial flavoenzyme that catalyzes the oxidative demethylation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and contains covalently bound FAD [8alpha-(S-cysteinyl)FAD]. This paper describes the spectroscopic and thermodynamic properties of MSOX as well as the X-ray crystallographic characterization of three new enzyme.inhibitor complexes. MSOX stabilizes the anionic form of the oxidized flavin (pK(a) = 8.3 versus 10.4 with free FAD), forms a thermodynamically stable flavin radical, and stabilizes the anionic form of the radical (pK(a) < 6 versus pK(a) = 8.3 with free FAD). MSOX forms a covalent flavin.sulfite complex, but there appears to be a significant kinetic barrier against complex formation. Active site binding determinants were probed in thermodynamic studies with various substrate analogues whose binding was found to perturb the flavin absorption spectrum and inhibit MSOX activity. The carboxyl group of sarcosine is essential for binding since none is observed with simple amines. The amino group of sarcosine is not essential, but binding affinity depends on the nature of the substitution (CH(3)XCH(2)CO(2)(-), X = CH(2) < O < S < Se < Te), an effect which has been attributed to differences in the strength of donor-pi interactions. MSOX probably binds the zwitterionic form of sarcosine, as judged by the spectrally similar complexes formed with dimethylthioacetate [(CH(3))(2)S(+)CH(2)CO(2)(-)] and dimethylglycine (K(d) = 20.5 and 17.4 mM, respectively) and by the crystal structure of the latter. The methyl group of sarcosine is not essential but does contribute to binding affinity. The methyl group contribution varied from -3.79 to -0.65 kcal/mol with CH(3)XCH(2)CO(2)(-) depending on the nature of the heteroatom (NH(2)(+) > O > S) and appeared to be inversely correlated with heteroatom electron density. Charge-transfer complexes are formed with MSOX and CH(3)XCH(2)CO(2)(-) when X = S, Se, or Te. An excellent linear correlation is observed between the energy of the charge transfer bands and the one-electron reduction potentials of the ligands. The presence of a sulfur, selenium, or telurium atom identically positioned with respect to the flavin ring is confirmed by X-ray crystallography, although the increased atomic radius of S < Se < Te appears to simultaneously favor an alternate binding position for the heavier atoms. Although L-proline is a poor substrate, aromatic heterocyclic carboxylates containing a five-membered ring and various heteroatoms (X = NH, O, S) are good ligands (K(d, X=NH) = 1.37 mM) and form charge-transfer complexes with MSOX. The energy of the charge-transfer bands (S > O > NH) is linearly correlated with the one-electron ionization potentials of the corresponding heterocyclic rings.  相似文献   

20.
On the basis of the three-dimensional structure of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase determined by X-ray crystallography, His 51 has been proposed to act as a general base during catalysis by abstracting a proton from the alcohol substrate. A hydrogen-bonding system (proton relay system) connecting the alcohol substrate and His 51 has been proposed to mediate proton transfer. We have mutated His 51 to Gln in the homologous human liver beta 1 beta 1 alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzyme which is expected to have a similar proton relay system. The mutation resulted in an about 6-fold drop in V/Kb (Vmax for ethanol oxidation divided by Km for ethanol) at pH 7.0 and a 12-fold drop at pH 6.5. V/Kb could be restored completely or partially by the presence of high concentrations of glycylglycine, glycine, and phosphate buffers. A Br?nsted plot of the effect on V/Kb versus the pKa of these bases plus H2O and OH- was linear. Only secondary or tertiary amine buffers differed from linearity, presumably due to steric hindrance. These results suggest that His 51 acts as a general base catalyst during alcohol oxidation in the wild-type enzyme and can be functionally replaced in the mutant enzyme by general base catalysts present in the solvent. Steady-state kinetic constants for NAD+ and the trifluoroethanol inhibition patterns were similar between the wild-type and the mutant enzyme. Differences in the inhibition constants (Ki) of caprate and trifluoroethanol below pH 7.8 and in the pH dependence of Ki can be explained by the substitution of neutral Gln for positively charged His.  相似文献   

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