首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
B S Gibbs  S J Benkovic 《Biochemistry》1991,30(27):6795-6802
A pterin analogue, 5-[(3-azido-6-nitrobenzylidene)amino]-2,6-diamino-4-pyrimidinone (ANBADP), was synthesized as a probe of the pterin binding site of phenylalanine hydroxylase. The photoaffinity label has been found to be a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme with respect to 6,7-dimethyltetrahydropterin, having a Ki of 8.8 +/- 1.1 microM. The irreversible labeling of phenylalanine hydroxylase by the photoaffinity label upon irradiation is both concentration and time dependent. Phenylalanine hydroxylase is covalently labeled with a stoichiometry of 0.87 +/- 0.08 mol of label/enzyme subunit. 5-Deaza-6-methyltetrahydropterin protects against inactivation and both 5-deaza-6-methyltetrahydropterin and 6-methyltetrahydropterin protect against covalent labeling, indicating that labeling occurs at the pterin binding site. Three tryptic peptides were isolated from [3H]ANBADP-photolabeled enzyme and sequenced. All peptides indicated the sequence Thr-Leu-Lys-Ala-Leu-Tyr-Lys (residues 192-198). The residues labeled with [3H]ANBADP were Lys198 and Lys194, with the majority of the radioactivity being associated with Lys198. The reactive sulfhydryl of phenylalanine hydroxylase associated with activation of the enzyme was also identified by labeling with the chromophoric label 5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein [Parniak, M. A., & Kaufman, S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 6876]. Labeling of the enzyme resulted in 1 mol of fluorescein bound per phenylalanine hydroxylase subunit and a concomitant activation of phenylalanine hydroxylase to 82% of the activity found with phenylalanine-activated enzyme. Tryptic and chymotryptic peptides were isolated from fluorescein-labeled enzyme and sequenced. The modified residue was identified as Cys236.  相似文献   

2.
R N Puri  D Bhatnagar  R Roskoski 《Biochemistry》1985,24(23):6499-6508
The catalytic subunit of adenosine cyclic 3',5'-monophosphate dependent protein kinase from bovine skeletal muscle was rapidly inactivated by o-phthalaldehyde at 25 degrees C (pH 7.3). The reaction followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, and the second-order rate constant was 1.1 X 10(2) M-1 s-1. Absorbance and fluorescence spectroscopic data were consistent with the formation of an isoindole derivative (1 mol/mol of enzyme). The reaction between the catalytic subunit and o-phthalaldehyde was not reversed by the addition of reagents containing free primary amino and sulfhydryl functions following inactivation. The reaction, however, could be arrested at any stage during its progress by the addition of an excess of cysteine or less efficiently by homocysteine or glutathione. The catalytic subunit was protected from inactivation by the presence of the substrates magnesium adenosine triphosphate and an acceptor serine peptide substrate. The decrease in fluorescence emission intensity of incubation mixtures containing iodoacetamide- or 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine-modified catalytic subunit and o-phthalaldehyde paralleled the loss of phosphotransferase activity. Catalytic subunit denatured with urea failed to react with o-phthalaldehyde. Inactivation of the catalytic subunit by o-phthalaldehyde is probably due to the concomitant modification of lysine-72 and cysteine-199. The proximal distance between the epsilon-amino function of the lysine and the sulfhydryl group of the cysteine residues involved in isoindole formation in the native enzyme is estimated to be approximately 3 A. The molar transition energy of the catalytic subunit-o-phthalaldehyde adduct was 121 kJ/mol and compares favorably with a value of 127 kJ/mol for the 1-[(beta-hydroxyethyl)thio]-2-(beta-hydroxyethyl)isoindole in hexane, indicating that the active site lysine and cysteine residues involved in formation of the isoindole derivative of the catalytic subunit are located in a hydrophobic environment. o-Phthalaldehyde probably acts as an active site specific reagent for the catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

3.
Three cysteine-containing tryptic peptides were isolated and sequenced from mitochondrial 4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase using DABIA (4-dimethylaminoazobenzene-4-iodoacetamide) as specific labeling reagent for sulfhydryl groups. The enzyme is a dimer made up of two identical subunits, but four out of the six cysteinyl residues/dimer form disulfide bonds when treated with iodosobenzoate to yield inactive enzyme species. To identify the cysteinyl residues undergoing reversible oxidation/reduction, the S-DABIA-labeling patterns of the fully reduced (active) and fully oxidized (inactive) forms of the enzyme were compared. Tryptic digests of the reduced enzyme contained three labeled peptides. If the enzyme was treated with iodosobenzoate prior to reaction with DABIA and tryptic digestion, only one labeled peptide was detected and identified (peptide I), indicating that the two missing cysteinyl-containing peptides (peptides II, III) have been oxidized. The sulfhydryl groups undergoing oxidation/reduction were found to be intersubunit, based on SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis results. The loss of catalytic activity of 4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase by oxidation of sulfhydryl residues is related to constraints imposed at the subunit interface by the insertion of disulfide bonds.  相似文献   

4.
4-Aminobutyrate aminotransferase is inactivated by preincubation with N-(1-pyrene)maleimide (mixing molar ratio 10:1) at pH 7. The reaction with N-(1-pyrene)maleimide was monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy and the degree of labeling of the enzyme determined by absorption spectroscopy. The blocking of 2 cysteinyl residues/enzyme dimer is needed for inactivation of the aminotransferase. The time course of the reaction is significantly affected by the substrate alpha-ketoglutarate, which afforded complete protection against the loss of catalytic activity. Trypsin digestion of pyrene-labeled aminotransferase, followed by gel filtration and "fingerprint" analysis, revealed the presence of only one peptide tagged with the fluorescent probe. The reaction of approximately 1.9 SH residues/dimer with iodosobenzoate resulted in enzyme inactivation together with a formation of an oligomeric species of Mr = 100,000 detectable by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The cross-linked subunits are dissociated by addition of 2-mercaptoethanol which also restores full catalytic activity. Altogether, these observations are consistent with the concept that inactivation of 4-aminobutyrate aminotransferase by iodosobenzoate proceeds through disulfide bond formation between vicinal cysteinyl residues of the protein. It is postulated that the critical sulfhydryl groups of the enzyme are situated on opposite sides of the dimeric structure at the subunit interfaces.  相似文献   

5.
The nucleotide affinity label 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl adenosine reacts at the active site of rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase, with irreversible inactivation occurring concomitant with incorporation of about 1 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit (Annamalai, A. E., and Colman, R. F. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 10276-10283). Purified peptides have now been isolated from 70% inactivated enzyme containing 0.7 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit. Rabbit muscle enzyme labeled with radioactive 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl adenosine was digested with thermolysin. Nucleosidyl peptides were purified by chromatography on phenylboronate-agarose and reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. After amino acid and N-terminal analysis, the peptides were identified by comparison with the primary sequences of chicken and cat muscle enzyme. About 75% of the reagent incorporated was distributed equally among three O-(4-carboxybenzenesulfonyl)tyrosine-containing peptides: Leu-Asp-CBS-Tyr-Lys-Asn, Val-CBS-Tyr, and Leu-Asp-Asn-Ala-CBS-Tyr. These tyrosines are located in a 28-residue segment of the 530-amino acid sequence. The remainder of the incorporation was found in two N epsilon-(4-carboxybenzenesulfonyl)lysine-containing peptides. Leu-CBS-Lys and Ala-CBS-Lys-Gly-Asp-Tyr-Pro. Modification in the presence of MnATP or MnADP resulted in a marked decrease in labeling of these peptides in proportion to the decreased inactivation. It is suggested that these modified residues are located in the region of the catalytically functional nucleotide binding site of pyruvate kinase.  相似文献   

6.
The sequence segment 181-200 of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) alpha subunit forms a binding site for alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) [e.g., see Conti-Tronconi, B. M., Tang, F., Diethelm, B. M., Spencer, S. R., Reinhardt-Maelicke, S., & Maelicke, A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 6221-6230]. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the homologous sequences of human, calf, mouse, chicken, frog, and cobra muscle nAChR alpha 1 subunits were tested for their ability to bind 125I-alpha-BTX, and differences in alpha-BTX affinity were determined by using solution (IC50S) and solid-phase (KdS) assays. Panels of overlapping peptides corresponding to the complete alpha 1 subunit of mouse and human were also tested for alpha-BTX binding, but other sequence segments forming the alpha-BTX site were not consistently detectable. The Torpedo alpha 1(181-200) and the homologous frog and chicken peptides bound alpha-BTX with higher affinity (KdS approximately 1-2 microM, IC50s approximately 1-2 microM) than the human and calf peptides (Kds approximately 3-5 microM, IC50s approximately 15 microM). The mouse peptide bound alpha-BTX weakly when attached to a solid support (Kd approximately 8 microM) but was effective in competing for 125I-alpha-BTX in solution (IC50 approximately 1 microM). The cobra nAChR alpha 1-subunit peptide did not detectably bind alpha-BTX in either assay. Amino acid substitutions were correlated with alpha-BTX binding activity peptides from different species. The role of a putative vicinal disulfide bound between Cys-192 and -193, relative to the Torpedo sequence, was determined by modifying the peptides with sulfhydryl reagents. Reduction and alkylation of the peptides decreased alpha-BTX binding, whereas oxidation of the peptides had little effect. Modifications of the cysteine/cystine residues of the cobra peptide failed to induce alpha-BTX binding activity. These results indicate that while the adjacent cysteines are likely to be involved in forming the toxin/alpha 1-subunit interface a vicinal disulfide bound was not required for alpha-BTX binding.  相似文献   

7.
NADP+-specific glutamate dehydrogenase from Salmonella typhimurium, cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, has been purified to homogeneity. The nucleotide sequence of S. typhimurium gdhA was determined and the amino acid sequence derived. The nucleotide analogue 2-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]-1,N6-ethenoadenosine 2',5'-bisphosphate (2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP) reacts irreversibly with the enzyme to yield a partially inactive enzyme. After about 60% loss of activity, no further inactivation is observed. The rate of inactivation exhibits a nonlinear dependence on 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP concentration with kmax = 0.160 min-1 and KI = 300 microM. Reaction of 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP with glutamate dehydrogenase for 120 min results in the incorporation of 0.94 mol of reagent/mol of enzyme subunit. The coenzymes, NADPH and NADP+, completely protect the enzyme against inactivation by the reagent and decrease the reagent incorporation from 0.94 to 0.5 mol of reagent/mol enzyme subunit, while the substrate alpha-ketoglutarate offers only partial protection. These results indicate that 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP functions as an affinity label of the coenzyme binding site and that specific reaction occurs at only about 0.5 sites/enzyme subunit or 3 sites/hexamer. Glutamate dehydrogenase modified with 200 microM 2-BDB-T epsilon A-2',5'-DP in the absence and presence of coenzyme was reduced with NaB3H4, carboxymethylated, and digested with trypsin. Labeled peptides were purified by high performance liquid chromatography and characterized by gas phase sequencing. Two peptides modified by the reagent were isolated and identified as follows: Phe-Cys(CM)-Gln-Ala-Leu-Met-Thr-Glu-Leu-Tyr-Arg and Leu-Cys(CM)-Glu-Ile-Lys. These two peptides were located within the derived amino acid sequence as residues 146-156 and 282-286. In the presence of NADPH, which completely prevents inactivation, only peptide 146-156 was labeled. This result indicates that modification of the pentapeptide causes loss of activity. Glutamate 284 in this peptide is the probable reaction target and is located within the coenzyme binding site.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate residues involved in the formation of the noncatalytic nucleotide binding sites of the vacuolar proton-translocating adenosine triphosphatase (V-ATPase), cysteine scanning mutagenesis of the VMA2 gene that encodes the B subunit in yeast was performed. Replacement of the single endogenous cysteine residue at position 188 gave rise to a Cys-less form of the B subunit (Vma2p) which had near wild-type levels of activity and which was used in the construction of 16 single cysteine-containing mutants. The ability of adenine nucleotides to prevent reaction of the introduced cysteine residues with the sulfhydryl reagent 3-(N-maleimidopropionyl)biocytin (biotin-maleimide) was evaluated by Western blot. Biotin-maleimide labeling of the purified V-ATPase from the wild-type and the mutants S152C, L178C, N181C, A184C, and T279C was reduced after reaction with the nucleotide analog 3'-O-(4-benzoyl)benzoyladenosine 5'-triphosphate (BzATP). These results suggest the proximity of these residues to the nucleotide binding site on the B subunit. In addition, we have examined the level of endogenous nucleotide bound to the wild-type V-ATPase and to a mutant (the A subunit mutant R483Q) which is postulated to be altered at the noncatalytic site and which displays a marked nonlinearity in ATP hydrolysis (MacLeod, K. J., Vasilyeva, E., Baleja, J. D., and Forgac, M. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 150-156). The R483Q mutant contained 2.6 mol of ATP/mol of V-ATPase compared with the wild-type enzyme, which contained 0.8 mol of ATP/mol of V-ATPase. These results suggest that binding of additional ATP to the noncatalytic sites may modulate the catalytic activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
In a new strategy for labeling the active sites of serine proteinases with fluorescence probes (Bock, P. E. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 6633-6639), a thioester peptide chloromethyl ketone inhibitor is incorporated into the enzyme active center and used to produce a unique thiol group which provides a site for selective chemical modification with any one of many thiol-reactive fluorescence probes. This approach was developed to increase the opportunities for identifying fluorescent proteinase derivatives that act as reporters of binding interactions by allowing a large number of derivatives, representing a broad range of probe spectral properties, to be readily prepared. In the studies described here, the specificity of the labeling approach was evaluated quantitatively for the labeling of human alpha and beta/gamma-thrombin with the thioester peptide chloromethyl ketones, N alpha-[(acetylthio)acetyl]-D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl and N alpha-[(acetylthio)acetyl]-D-Phe-Phe-Arg-CH2Cl, and the thiol-reactive fluorescence probe, 5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein. Irreversible inactivation of thrombin by the inhibitors was accompanied by incorporation of 0.98 +/- 0.06 mol/mol of the thioester group into the active site, independent of a 470-fold difference between the thioester peptide chloromethyl ketones in the bimolecular rate constants of alpha-thrombin affinity labeling. Subsequent mild treatment of the covalent thrombin-inhibitor complexes with NH2OH in the presence of 5-(iodoacetamido)fluorescein resulted in generation of the thiol group together with its selective modification and incorporation of 0.96 +/- 0.07 mol of probe/mol of active sites. The incorporated label was localized to a 9000 molecular weight region of alpha and beta/gamma-thrombin containing the catalytic-site histidine residue. Evaluation of competing, side reactions showed that they did not significantly compromise the active site specificity of labeling. These results demonstrated equivalent, active-site-selective fluorescence probe labeling of alpha and beta/gamma-thrombin by use of either of the thioester peptide chloromethyl ketones, with a site specificity of greater than or equal to 94%.  相似文献   

10.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase [ATP:oxaloacetate carboxy-lyase (transphosphorylating), EC 4.1.1.49] is inactivated by the fluorescent sulfhydryl reagent N-(iodoacetyl-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine (1,5-IAEDANS). The inactivation reaction follows pseudo-first-order kinetics with respect to active enzyme to less than 10% remaining enzyme activity, with a second-order inactivation rate constant of 2.6 min-1 mM-1 at pH 7.5 and 30 degrees C. A stoichiometry of 1.05 mol of reagent incorporated per mole of enzyme subunit was found for the completely inactivated enzyme. Almost complete protection of the enzyme activity and of dansyl label incorporation are afforded by MnADP or MnATP, thus suggesting that 1,5-IAEDANS interacts with an enzyme sulfhydryl group at the nucleotide binding site. The fluorescence decay of the AEDANS attached to the protein shows a single-exponential behavior with a lifetime of 18 ns. A comparison of the fluorescence band position and the fluorescence decay with those of the adduct AEDANS-acetylcysteine indicates a reduced polarity for the microenvironment of the substrate binding site. The quenching of the AEDANS moiety in the protein can be described in terms of a collisional and a static component. The rate constant for the collisional component is much lower than that obtained for the adduct in a medium of reduced polarity. These last results indicate that the AEDANS moiety is considerably shielded from the solvent when it is covalently attached to PEPCK.  相似文献   

11.
Ethanolamine ammonia-lyase is an adenosylcobalamin-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the rearrangement of ethanolamine and other vicinal amino alcohols to oxo-compounds and ammonia. Treatment of this enzyme with the sulfhydryl group-blocking reagent methyl methanethiosulfonate produces a species with diminished catalytic activity. When methyl methanethiosulfonate -treated ethanolamine ammonia-lyase was incubated with a carboxyl-blocking reagent consisting of glycine ethyl ester plus a water-soluble carbodiimide, the enzyme lost more than 80% of its residual activity, while at the same time glycine ethyl ester was incorporated into it at a stoichiometry of 6 mol/mol of enzyme. Both the loss of activity and the incorporation of glycine ethyl ester were prevented if ethanolamine was included in the glycine ethyl ester-containing incubation mixture. These results suggest that an active site carboxyl group plays a role in the mechanism of catalysis by ethanolamine ammonia-lyase, and that this carboxyl group is amidated when the enzyme is incubated with glycine ethyl ester plus carbodiimide.  相似文献   

12.
T7 RNA polymerase has been purified to homogeneity from an overproducing clone of Escherichia coli containing pAR1219. Preparations have a zinc content as low as 0.01 mol/mol of enzyme and a high specific activity, 300 000-500 000 units/mg. There are no intrinsic zinc sites. Furthermore, extrinsic Zn2+ does not function as an activator. Supplementation of the assay mix with up to 5 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid has little effect on activity while added Zn2+ is strongly inhibitory at concentrations above 10 microM. This monomeric RNA polymerase is not a zinc metalloenzyme, unlike its multimeric bacterial counterparts. Titration of the urea-denatured protein with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) reveals that all 12 Cys residues are present in the free sulfhydryl form, 5 of which are readily accessible to reagent in the native enzyme. More preferential labeling of the sulfhydryls can be achieved with low concentrations of [14C]iodoacetamide, where inactivation of the enzyme proceeds with incorporation of approximately 1.2 mol of [14C]iodoacetamide/mol of polymerase. Amidomethylation primarily occurs at Cys-347, with lesser reaction at Cys-723 and Cys-839. Cys-347 and Cys-723 are in segments of the primary sequence containing numerous basic residues. These same segments have previously been implicated in promoter binding, suggesting that both residues are located within or near the active site region.  相似文献   

13.
V N Hingorani  Y Ho 《Biochemistry》1987,26(6):1633-1639
Fluorescein 5'-isothiocyanate (FITC) was used to modify the lysine residues of bovine transducin (T), a GTP-binding protein involved in phototransduction of rod photoreceptor cells. The incorporation of FITC showed a stoichiometry of approximately 1 mol of FITC/mol of transducin. The labeling was specific for the T alpha subunit. There was no significant incorporation on the T beta gamma subunit. The modification had no effect on the transducin-rhodopsin interaction or on the binding of guanosine 5'-(beta, gamma-imidotriphosphate) [Gpp(NH)p] to transducin in the presence of photolyzed rhodopsin. The dissociation of the FITC-transducin-Gpp(NH)p complex from rhodopsin membrane remained unchanged. However, the intrinsic GTPase activity of T alpha and its ability to activate the cGMP phosphodiesterase were diminished by FITC modification. The rate of FITC labeling of the transducin-Gpp(NH)p complex was about 3-fold slower than that of transducin. Limited tryptic digestion and peptide mapping were used to localize the FITC labeling site. The majority of the FITC label was on the 23-kilodalton fragment, and a minor amount was on the 9-kilodalton fragment of the T alpha subunit. These results indicate that FITC labeling does not alter the activation of transducin by photolyzed rhodopsin but does affect the GTP hydrolytic activity as well as the GTP-induced conformational change of T alpha, which ultimately leads to the activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase.  相似文献   

14.
Periodate-oxidized tRNA(Phe) (tRNA(oxPhe)) behaves as a specific affinity label of tetrameric Escherichia coli phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (PheRS). Reaction of the alpha 2 beta 2 enzyme with tRNA(oxPhe) results in the loss of tRNAPhe aminoacylation activity with covalent attachment of 2 mol of tRNA dialdehyde/mol of enzyme, in agreement with the stoichiometry of tRNA binding. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the PheRS-[14C]tRNA(oxPhe) covalent complex indicates that the large (alpha, Mr 87K) subunit of the enzyme interacts with the 3'-adenosine of tRNA(oxPhe). The [14C]tRNA-labeled chymotryptic peptides of PheRS were purified by both gel filtration and reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The radioactivity was almost equally distributed among three peptides: Met-Lys[Ado]-Phe, Ala-Asp-Lys[Ado]-Leu, and Lys-Ile-Lys[Ado]-Ala. These sequences correspond to residues 1-3, 59-62, and 104-107, respectively, in the N-terminal region of the 795 amino acid sequence of the alpha subunit. It is noticeable that the labeled peptide Ala-Asp-Lys-Leu is adjacent to residues 63-66 (Arg-Val-Thr-Lys). The latter sequence was just predicted to resemble the proposed consensus tRNA CCA binding region Lys-Met-Ser-Lys-Ser, as deduced from previous affinity labeling studies on E. coli methionyl- and tyrosyl-tRNA synthetases [Hountondji, C., Dessen, P., & Blanquet, S. (1986) Biochimie 68, 1071-1078].  相似文献   

15.
M A Jacobson  R F Colman 《Biochemistry》1984,23(17):3789-3799
The distance between the catalytic site on bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase labeled with 4-(iodoacetamido)salicylic acid (ISA) and the adenosine 5'-diphosphate (ADP) activatory site occupied by the analogue 2',3'-O-(2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienylidene)adenosine 5'-diphosphate (TNP-ADP) was evaluated by energy transfer. Native enzyme and enzyme containing about 1 mol of acetamidosalicylate/mol of subunit bind about 0.5 mol of TNP-ADP/mol of subunit, and TNP-ADP competes for binding with ADP to native and modified enzyme, indicating that the analogue is a satisfactory probe of the ADP site. From the quenching of acetamidosalicylate donor fluorescence upon addition of TNP-ADP, an average distance of 33 A was determined between the catalytic and ADP sites. The fluorescent nucleotide analogue 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]-2-aza-1,N6-ethenoadenosine (5'-FSBa epsilon A) reacts covalently with glutamate dehydrogenase to about 1 mol/peptide chain. As compared to native enzyme, the SBa epsilon A-enzyme exhibits decreased sensitivity to GTP inhibition but retains its catalytic activity as well as its ability to be activated by ADP and inhibited by high concentrations of NADH. Complete protection against decreased sensitivity to GTP inhibition is provided by GTP in the presence of NADH. It is concluded that 5'-FSBa epsilon A modifies a GTP site on glutamate dehydrogenase. The distance of 23 A between the catalytic site labeled with ISA and a GTP site labeled with 5'-FSBa epsilon A was measured from the quenching of salicylate donor fluorescence in the presence of the SBa epsilon A acceptor on a doubly labeled enzyme. The average distance between the ADP and GTP sites was previously measured as 18 A [Jacobson, M. A., & Colman, R. F. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 4247-4257], indicating that the regulatory sites of glutamate dehydrogenase are closer to each other than to the catalytic site.  相似文献   

16.
Enzyme I is the first protein of the phospho transfer sequence in the bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:glycose phosphotransferase system. This protein exhibits a temperature-dependent monomer/dimer equilibrium. The nucleotide sequence of Escherichia coli ptsI indicates four -SH residues per subunit (Saffen, D. W., Presper, K. A., Doering, T. L., and Roseman, S. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 16241-16253). In the present experiments, the sulfhydryl groups of the E. coli enzyme were studied with various -SH-specific reagents. Titration of Enzyme I with 5,5'-dithiobis-2-nitrobenzoic acid also revealed four reacting -SH groups. The kinetics of the 5,5'-dithiobis-2-nitrobenzoic acid reaction with Enzyme I exhibit biphasic character, with pseudo-first order rate constants of 2.3 x 10(-2)/s and 2.3 x 10(-3)/s at pH 7.5, at room temperature. Fractional amplitudes associated with the rate constants were 25 +/- 5% for the fast and 75 +/- 5% for the slow rate. The "slow" rate was influenced by ligands that react with Enzyme I (the protein HPr, Mg2+, Mg2+ plus P-enolpyruvate), and also by temperature (at the temperature range where the monomer/dimer association occurs). The fractional ratio of the two rates remained at 1:3 under these conditions. Thus, under all conditions tested, two classes of -SH groups were detected, one reacting more rapidly than the other three -SH groups. Modification of the "fast" -SH group results in an active enzyme capable of forming dimer, whereas modification of the slow -SH groups results in inactive and monomeric Enzyme I. The enzyme was labeled with pyrene maleimide under conditions where only the more reactive sulfhydryl group was derivatized. Hydrolysis by trypsin followed by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography analysis of the peptide mixture resulted in only one fluorescent peak. This peak was not observed when the more reactive sulfhydryl residue was protected prior to pyrene maleimide labeling. Amino acid sequencing of the fluorescent peak indicated that the more reactive residue is the C-terminal amino acid residue, cysteine 575. The results provide a means for selectively labeling Enzyme I with a fluorophore at a single site while retaining full catalytic activity.  相似文献   

17.
J W Ogilvie 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):5915-5921
The reaction of the fluorescent affinity label 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]-1,N6-ethenoadenosine with rabbit skeletal muscle phosphofructokinase results in an inactivation of the enzyme and in the covalent incorporation of up to one label/monomer. The substrates, MgATP and fructose 6-phosphate, each protect against inactivation of the enzyme, but neither diminishes the extent of covalent incorporation of the label, indicating that the inactivation is not the result of covalent incorporation of the label. Dithiothreitol reactivates the inactivated enzyme but does not reduce the extent of incorporation of the label. A determination of the number of free sulfhydryl groups on the enzyme as a function of the extent of inactivation by the reagent suggests that the inactivation is associated with the loss of two free sulfhydryl groups per phosphofructokinase monomer. The inactivation reaction appears to involve the reversible formation of an enzyme-reagent complex (Kd = 1.11 mM) prior to the conversion of the complex to inactive enzyme (k1 = 0.98 min-1). In view of the protection afforded by either substrate and the evidence suggesting the formation of an enzyme-reagent complex prior to inactivation, it would appear that the inactivation results from a reagent-mediated formation of a disulfide bond between two cysteinyl residues in close proximity, possibly in or near the catalytic site of the enzyme. The site of covalent attachment of the label appears to be the binding site specific for the activating adenine nucleotides cAMP, AMP, and ADP. The extent of covalent incorporation of the label at this site is diminished in the presence of cAMP, and phosphofructokinase modified at this site by this affinity label is no longer subject to activation by cAMP.  相似文献   

18.
J P Klinman 《Biochemistry》1975,14(12):2568-2574
Yeast alcohol dehydrogenase is inactivated and alkylated by styrene oxide in a single exponential kinetic process. The concentration dependence of half-times for inactivation indicates the formation of an enzyme inhibitor complex, KI = 2.5 times 10(-2) M at pH 8.0. Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH), at a concentration of 3 times 10(-4) M where Kd congruent to 1 times 10(-5) M, has a small effect on kinetic parameters for inactivation. Although benzyl alcohol and acetamide-NADH increase the KI for styrene oxide in a manner consistent with their dissociation constants, substrate also increases the rate of inactivation at high styrene oxide concentrations. The reciprocal of half-times for inactivation, extrapolated to infinite styrene oxide concentration, increases with pH between 7.6 and 9.0, pK congruent to 8.5. The stoichiometry of alkylation by [3H]styrene oxide is 2.2 mol of reagent incorporated/mol of subunit, and is accompanied by the loss of 1.9 mol of sulfhydryl/mol of subunit; prior alkylation with iodoacetamide reduces the stoichiometry to 0.88:1, and increases the rate of labeling. Tryptic digests of enzyme modified with [14C]iodoacetamide or [3H]styrene oxide produce two major peptides which cochromatograph, indicating that styrene oxide and iodoacetamide modify the same cysteine residues. Previous investigators have reported that iodoacetate, iodoacetamide, and butyl isocyanate alkylate either of two reactive cysteines of yeast alcohol dehydrogenase; both cysteines cannot be modified simultaneously [Belke et al. (1974), Biochemistry 13, 3418]. The inactivation of enzyme by p-chloromercuribenzoate (PCMB) is reported here to be accompanied by the incorporation of 2.3 mol of PCMB/mol of enzyme subunits, in analogy with styrene oxide; the planarity of the alkylating agent appears to be an important factor in determining the stoichiometry of labeling.  相似文献   

19.
Sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane vesicles from rabbit skeletal muscle were treated with iodoacetamide (IAA) at pH 7.0 and 30 degrees C. At 1.0 mM IAA, 1 mol of IAA per mol of ATPase peptide was bound in 1 h. Under these conditions, IAA was attached specifically to the B-tryptic fragment portion of the peptide. The binding of IAA did not affect the Ca2+-transporting activity of ATPase. Three fluorescent derivatives of iodoacetamide, 5-(2-acetamidoethyl)aminonaphthalene-1-sulfonate (IAEDANS), 5-iodoacetamido fluorescein (IAF), and 5-iodoacetamido eosin (IAE), were also tested for reactivity toward sarcoplasmic reticulum ATPase at 30 degrees C and pH 7.0. In 1 h at 50 microM concentration, each of these fluorescent labels modified ATPase to a labeling density of 1 mol per mol of ATPase. Neither IAEDANS nor IAF at this labeling density affected Ca2+-transporting activity, but IAE reduced it to 20% of the untreated control. The target site of IAEDANS at this labeling density was located exclusively on the B-fragment portion, as was the case with IAA, but IAF label was found on both A1 and B fragments after limited tryptic digestion. IAEDANS was used as a B-fragment portion-directed conformational probe of Ca2+-transport ATPase, and an increase in fluorescence intensity accompanying E1Ca-P formation was detected. The fluorescence enhancement was abolished when E1Ca-P X ADP beta S was formed by adding ADP beta S to preformed E1Ca-P. This suggests that the conformation of ATPase in the neighborhood of the IAEDANS binding site may be altered in response to the dissociation of ADP from the phosphorylated intermediate.  相似文献   

20.
Fructose-6-P binding sites of rat liver and bovine heart Fru-6-P,2-kinase:Fru-2,6-bisphosphatase were investigated with an affinity labeling reagent, N-bromoacetylethanolamine phosphate. The rat liver enzyme was inactivated 97% by the reagent in 60 min, and the rate of inactivation followed pseudo-first order kinetics. The bovine heart enzyme was inactivated 90% within 60 min, but the inactivation rate followed pseudo-first order up to 80% inactivation and then became nonlinear. The presence of fructose-6-P retarded the extent of the inactivation to approximately 40% in 60 min. In order to determine the amino acid sequence of the fructose-6-P binding site, both enzymes were reacted with N-bromo[14C]acetylethanolamine-P and digested with trypsin; radiolabeled tryptic peptides were isolated and sequenced. A single 14C-labeled peptide was isolated from the rat liver enzyme, and the amino acid sequence of the peptide was determined as Lys-Gln-Cys-Ala-Leu-Ala-Leu-Lys. A major and two minor peptides were isolated from bovine heart enzyme whose amino acid sequences were Lys-Gln-Cys-Ala-Leu-Val-Ala-Leu-Lys, Arg-Ile-Glu-Cys-Tyr-Lys, and Ile-Glu-Cys-Tyr-Lys, respectively. In all cases, N-bromoacetylethanolamine-P had alkylated the cysteine residues. The amount of bromo[14C]acetylethanolamine-P incorporated into rat liver and beef heart was 1.3 mol/mol of subunit and 2.1 mol/mol of subunit, respectively, and the incorporations in the presence of Fru-6-P were reduced to 0.34 mol/mol of subunit and 0.9 mol/mol of subunit, respectively. Thus, the main fructose-6-P binding site of rat liver and bovine heart enzymes was identical except for a single amino acid substitution of valine for alanine in the latter enzyme. This peptide corresponded to residues 105 to 113 from the N terminus of the known amino acid sequence of rat liver enzyme, but since the complete sequence of bovine heart enzyme is not known, the location of the same peptide in the heart enzyme cannot be assigned.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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