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1.
Cyanase is an inducible enzyme in Escherichia coli that catalyzes bicarbonate-dependent decomposition of cyanate to give ammonia and bicarbonate. The enzyme is composed of 8-10 identical subunits (Mr = 17,008). The objective of this study was to clarify some of the structural properties of cyanase for the purpose of understanding the relationship between oligomeric structure and catalytic activity. Circular dichroism studies showed that cyanase has a significant amount of alpha-helix and beta-sheet structure. The one sulfhydryl group per subunit does not react with 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) unless cyanase is denatured. Denaturation is apparently complete in 10 M urea or 6 M guanidine hydrochloride, but is significantly reduced in 10 M urea by the presence of azide (analog of cyanate) and is incomplete in 8 M urea. Denatured cyanase could be renatured and reactivated (greater than 85%) by removal of denaturants. Reactivation was greatly facilitated by the presence of certain anions, particularly bicarbonate, and by high ionic strength and protein concentration. The catalytic activity of renatured cyanase was associated only with oligomer. Cyanase that had been denatured in the presence of DTNB to give a cyanase-DTNB derivative could also be renatured at 26 degrees C to give active cyanase-DTNB oligomer. The active oligomeric form of the cyanase-DTNB derivative could be converted reversibly to inactive dimer by lowering the temperature to 4 degrees C or by reduction of the ionic strength and removal of monoanions. These results provide evidence that free sulfhydryl groups are not required for catalytic activity and that catalytic activity may be dependent upon oligomeric structure.  相似文献   

2.
Cyanase is an inducible enzyme in Escherichia coli that catalyzes bicarbonate-dependent hydrolysis of cyanate. The dianions oxalate, oxalacetate, and malonate are slow-binding inhibitors of cyanase, and some monoanions such as azide and chloride also inhibit cyanase activity [Anderson, P. M., & Little, R. M. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 1621-1626]. The purpose of this study was to investigate the interaction of selected dianions and monoanions by kinetic and equilibrium dialysis binding studies in an effort to obtain information about the active site and catalytic mechanism. Measurement of the effectiveness of 30 different dianions as inhibitors of cyanase showed a significant degree of structural and/or isomeric specificity and considerable variation with respect to the slow-binding nature of the inhibition. Oxalate and oxalacetate both show extreme slow-binding inhibition at very low concentrations. Kinetic studies of the rate of inhibition of cyanase by oxalate showed that the reaction is pseudo first order with respect to oxalate concentration and the results are consistent with a pathway in which oxalate forms a complex with the enzyme in a rapid initial reversible step followed by a slow isomerization step leading to a complex with a very low dissociation constant. The rate of inhibition is significantly reduced by the presence of relatively low concentrations of either azide (analogue of cyanate) or bicarbonate. Equilibrium dialysis binding studies showed that the stoichiometry of binding at saturation for oxalate, malonate, chloride, and bicarbonate is about 0.5 mol of ligand bound/mol of subunit for each compound.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Cyanate induces expression of the cyn operon in Escherichia coli. The cyn operon includes the gene cynS, encoding cyanase, which catalyzes the reaction of cyanate with bicarbonate to give ammonia and carbon dioxide. A carbonic anhydrase activity was recently found to be encoded by the cynT gene, the first gene of the cyn operon; it was proposed that carbonic anhydrase prevents depletion of bicarbonate during cyanate decomposition due to loss of CO2 by diffusion out of the cell (M. B. Guilloton, J. J. Korte, A. F. Lamblin, J. A. Fuchs, and P. M. Anderson, J. Biol. Chem. 267:3731-3734, 1992). The function of the product of the third gene of this operon, cynX, is unknown. In the study reported here, the physiological roles of cynT and cynX were investigated by construction of chromosomal mutants in which each of the three genes was rendered inactive. The delta cynT chromosomal mutant expressed an active cyanase but no active carbonic anhydrase. In contrast to the wild-type strain, the growth of the delta cynT strain was inhibited by cyanate, and the mutant strain was unable to degrade cyanate and therefore could not use cyanate as the sole nitrogen source when grown at a partial CO2 pressures (pCO2) of 0.03% (air). At a high pCO2 (3%), however, the delta cynT strain behaved like the wild-type strain; it was significantly less sensitive to the toxic effects of cyanate and could degrade cyanate and use cyanate as the sole nitrogen source for growth. These results are consistent with the proposed function for carbonic anhydrase. The chromosomal mutant carrying cynS::kan expressed induced carbonic anhydrase activity but no active cyanase. The cynS::kan mutant was found to be much less sensitive to cyanate than the delta cynT mutant at a low pCO2, indicating that bicarbonate depletion due to the reaction of bicarbonate with cyanate catalyzed by cyanase is more deleterious to growth than direct inhibition by cyanate. Mutants carrying a nonfunctional cynX gene (cynX::kan and delta cynT cynX::kan) did not differ from the parental strains with respect to cyanate sensitivity, presence of carbonic anhydrase and cyanase, or degradation of cyanate by whole cells; the physiological role of the cynX product remains unknown.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Cyanase is an enzyme found in bacteria and plants that catalyzes the reaction of cyanate with bicarbonate to produce ammonia and carbon dioxide. In Escherichia coli, cyanase is induced from the cyn operon in response to extracellular cyanate. The enzyme is functionally active as a homodecamer of 17 kDa subunits, and displays half-site binding of substrates or substrate analogs. The enzyme shows no significant amino acid sequence homology with other proteins. RESULTS: We have determined the crystal structure of cyanase at 1.65 A resolution using the multiwavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD) method. Cyanase crystals are triclinic and contain one homodecamer in the asymmetric unit. Selenomethionine-labeled protein offers 40 selenium atoms for use in phasing. Structures of cyanase with bound chloride or oxalate anions, inhibitors of the enzyme, allowed identification of the active site. CONCLUSIONS: The cyanase monomer is composed of two domains. The N-terminal domain shows structural similarity to the DNA-binding alpha-helix bundle motif. The C-terminal domain has an 'open fold' with no structural homology to other proteins. The subunits of cyanase are arranged in a novel manner both at the dimer and decamer level. The dimer structure reveals the C-terminal domains to be intertwined, and the decamer is formed by a pentamer of these dimers. The active site of the enzyme is located between dimers and is comprised of residues from four adjacent subunits of the homodecamer. The structural data allow a conceivable reaction mechanism to be proposed.  相似文献   

5.
The amino acid sequence of Escherichia coli cyanase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The amino acid sequence of the enzyme cyanase (cyanate hydrolase) from Escherichia coli has been determined by automatic Edman degradation of the intact protein and of its component peptides. The primary peptides used in the sequencing were produced by cyanogen bromide cleavage at the methionine residues, yielding 4 peptides plus free homoserine from the NH2-terminal methionine, and by trypsin cleavage at the 7 arginine residues after acetylation of the lysines. Secondary peptides required for overlaps and COOH-terminal sequences were produced by chymotrypsin or clostripain cleavage of some of the larger peptides. The complete sequence of the cyanase subunit consists of 156 amino acid residues (Mr 16,350). Based on the observation that the cysteine-containing peptide is obtained as a disulfide-linked dimer, it is proposed that the covalent structure of cyanase is made up of two subunits linked by a disulfide bond between the single cystine residue in each subunit. The native enzyme (Mr 150,000) then appears to be a complex of four or five such subunit dimers.  相似文献   

6.
Cyanase is an inducible enzyme in Escherichia coli that catalyzes the reaction of cyanate with bicarbonate to give two CO2 molecules. The gene for cyanase is part of the cyn operon, which includes cynT and cynS, encoding carbonic anhydrase and cyanase, respectively. Carbonic anhydrase functions to prevent depletion of cellular bicarbonate during cyanate decomposition (the product CO2 can diffuse out of the cell faster than noncatalyzed hydration back to bicarbonate). Addition of cyanate to the culture medium of a delta cynT mutant strain of E. coli (having a nonfunctional carbonic anhydrase) results in depletion of cellular bicarbonate, which leads to inhibition of growth and an inability to catalyze cyanate degradation. These effects can be overcome by aeration with a higher partial CO2 pressure (M. B. Guilloton, A. F. Lamblin, E. I. Kozliak, M. Gerami-Nejad, C. Tu, D. Silverman, P. M. Anderson, and J. A. Fuchs, J. Bacteriol. 175:1443-1451, 1993). The question considered here is why depletion of bicarbonate/CO2 due to the action of cyanase on cyanate in a delta cynT strain has such an inhibitory effect. Growth of wild-type E. coli in minimal medium under conditions of limited CO2 was severely inhibited, and this inhibition could be overcome by adding certain Krebs cycle intermediates, indicating that one consequence of limiting CO2 is inhibition of carboxylation reactions. However, supplementation of the growth medium with metabolites whose syntheses are known to depend on a carboxylation reaction was not effective in overcoming inhibition related to the bicarbonate deficiency induced in the delta cynT strain by addition of cyanate. Similar results were obtained with a deltacyn strain (since cyanase is absent, this strain does not develop a bicarbonate deficiency when cyanate is added); however, as with the deltacynT strain, a higher partial CO(2) pressure in the aerating gas or expression of carbonic anhydrase activity (which contributes to a higher intercellular concentration of bicarbonate/CO(2)) significantly reduced inhibition of growth. There appears to be competition between cyanate and bicarbonate/CO(2) at some unknown but very important site such that cyanate binding inhibits growth. These results suggest that bicarbonate/CO(2) plays a significant role in the growth of E. coli other than simply as a substrate for carboxylation reactions and that strains with mutations in the cyn operon provide a unique model system for studying aspects of the metabolism of bicarbonate/CO(2) and its regulation in bacteria.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli contains an inducible enzyme, cyanase, that catalyzes the decomposition of cyanate into ammonia and bicarbonate. The gene encoding cyanase, cynS, was cloned and found to be on a DNA fragment that contained the lac operon. Characterization of a plasmid encoding cyanase indicated that a 26-kilodalton (kDa) protein of unknown function was also induced by cyanate (Y-C. Sung, D. Parsell, P.M. Anderson, and J.A. Fuchs, J. Bacteriol. 169:2639-2642, 1987). The gene encoding the 26-kDa protein was located between cynS and its promoter, indicating the existence of a cyn operon. The 26-kDa protein was identified as a cyanate permease that transports exogenous cyanate by active transport. E. coli was shown to contain a cyanate transport system that is energy dependent and saturable by cyanate.  相似文献   

8.
Pseudomonas fluorescens NCIB 11764 was capable of utilizing cyanate (OCN-) as a sole nitrogen source for growth. Crude cell extracts from cells grown on cyanate, but not on ammonium sulfate, were induced for an enzyme catalyzing cyanate conversion to ammonia. Enzymatic activity was shown to be bicarbonate dependent and specific for cyanate as a substrate, suggesting that cyanate utilization in this organism is facilitated by an enzyme resembling cyanase (cyanate amidohydrolase; EC 3.5.5.3), as described previously in Escherichia coli and Flavobacterium sp.  相似文献   

9.
Cyanase catalyzes the reaction of cyanate with bicarbonate to give 2CO2. The cynS gene encoding cyanase, together with the cynT gene for carbonic anhydrase, is part of the cyn operon, the expression of which is induced in Escherichia coli by cyanate. The physiological role of carbonic anhydrase is to prevent depletion of cellular bicarbonate during cyanate decomposition due to loss of CO2 (M.B. Guilloton, A.F. Lamblin, E. I. Kozliak, M. Gerami-Nejad, C. Tu, D. Silverman, P.M. Anderson, and J.A. Fuchs, J. Bacteriol. 175:1443-1451, 1993). A delta cynT mutant strain was extremely sensitive to inhibition of growth by cyanate and did not catalyze decomposition of cyanate (even though an active cyanase was expressed) when grown at a low pCO2 (in air) but had a Cyn+ phenotype at a high pCO2. Here the expression of these two enzymes in this unusual system for cyanate degradation was characterized in more detail. Both enzymes were found to be located in the cytosol and to be present at approximately equal levels in the presence of cyanate. A delta cynT mutant strain could be complemented with high levels of expressed human carbonic anhydrase II; however, the mutant defect was not completely abolished, perhaps because the E. coli carbonic anhydrase is significantly less susceptible to inhibition by cyanate than mammalian carbonic anhydrases. The induced E. coli carbonic anhydrase appears to be particularly adapted to its function in cyanate degradation. Active cyanase remained in cells grown in the presence of either low or high pCO2 after the inducer cyanate was depleted; in contrast, carbonic anhydrase protein was degraded very rapidly (minutes) at a high pCO2 but much more slowly (hours) at a low pCO2. A physiological significance of these observations is suggested by the observation that expression of carbonic anhydrase at a high pCO2 decreased the growth rate.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
A recombinant geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGPS) was analysed to be a mixture of octamer, hexamer and dimer by gel filtration using a Superdex 200 column followed by the blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The hexamer and dimer were each converted to an octamer by treating with dithiothreitol (DTT). When the recombinant GGPS was preliminarily treated with DTT and similarly analysed, octamer was predominantly detected with a trace amount of hexamer. The octameric form of GGPS was also supported by the cross-linking experiments with bis(sulfosuccinimidyl) suberate. The GGPS in an octameric form was active with a combination of farnesyl diphosphate and [1-(14)C]isopentenyl diphosphate. These results indicate that the active form of GGPS in the solution is an octamer rather than hexamer or dimer.  相似文献   

12.
The roles of tyrosine 9 and aspartic acid 101 in the catalytic mechanism of rat glutathione S-transferase YaYa were studied by site-directed mutagenesis. Replacement of tyrosine 9 with phenylalanine (Y9F), threonine (Y9T), histidine (Y9H), or valine (Y9V) resulted in mutant enzymes with less than 5% catalytic activity of the wild type enzymes. Kinetic studies with purified Y9F and Y9T mutants demonstrated poor catalytic efficiencies which were largely due to a drastic decrease in kcat. The estimated pK alpha values of the sulfhydryl group of glutathione bound to Y9F and Y9T mutant enzymes were 8.5 to 8.7, similar to the chemical reaction, in contrast to the estimated pK alpha value of 6.7 to 6.8 for the glutathione enzyme complex of wild type glutathione S-transferase. These results indicate that tyrosine 9 is directly responsible for the lowering of the pKa of the sulfhydryl group of glutathione, presumably due to the stabilization of the thiolate anion through hydrogen bonding with the hydroxyl group of tyrosine. To examine the role of aspartic acid in the binding of glutathione to YaYa, 4 conserved aspartic acid residues at positions 61, 93, 101, and 157 were changed to glutamic acid and asparagine. All mutant enzymes retained either full or partial activity except D157N, which was virtually inactive. Kinetic studies with four mutant enzymes (D93E, D93N, D101E, and D101N) indicate that only D101N exhibited a 5-fold increase in Km toward glutathione. Also, the binding of this mutant to the affinity column was greatly reduced. These results demonstrate that aspartic acid 101 plays an important role in glutathione interaction to YaYa. The role of aspartic acid 157 in catalysis remains to be determined.  相似文献   

13.
To determine the physiological role of cyanate aminohydrolase (cyanase, EC 3.5.5.3) in bacteria, mutants of Escherichia coli K12 devoid of this inducible activity were isolated and their properties investigated. Five independent mutations were localized next to lac; three of them lay between lacY and codA. Thus cyanase activity could depend on the integrity of one gene or set of clustered genes; we propose for this locus the symbol cnt. Growth of the mutant stains was more sensitive to cyanate than growth of wild-type strains. This difference was noticeable in synthetic medium in the presence of low concentrations of cyanate (less than or equal to 1 mM). Higher concentrations inhibited growth of both wild-type and mutant strains. Urea in aqueous solutions dissociates slowly into ammonium cyanate. Accordingly wild-type strains were able to grow on a synthetic medium containing 0.5 M-urea whereas mutants lacking cyanase were not. We conclude that cyanase could play a role in destroying exogenous cyanate originating from the dissociation of carbamoyl compounds such as urea; alternatively cyanate might constitute a convenient nitrogen source for bacteria able to synthesize cyanase in an inducible way.  相似文献   

14.
The product of the cynT gene of the cyn operon in Escherichia coli has been identified as a carbonic anhydrase. The cyn operon also includes the gene cynS, encoding the enzyme cyanase. Cyanase catalyzes the reaction of cyanate with bicarbonate to give ammonia and carbon dioxide. The carbonic anhydrase was isolated from an Escherichia coli strain overexpressing the cynT gene and characterized. The purified enzyme was shown to contain 1 Zn2+/subunit (24 kDa) and was found to behave as an oligomer in solution; the presence of bicarbonate resulted in partial dissociation of the oligomeric enzyme. The kinetic properties of the enzyme are similar to those of carbonic anhydrases from other species, including inhibition by sulfonamides and cyanate. The amino acid sequence shows a high degree of identity with the sequences of two plant carbonic anhydrases. but not with animal and algal carbonic anhydrases. Since carbon dioxide formed in the bicarbonate-dependent decomposition of cyanate diffuses out of the cell faster than it would be hydrated to bicarbonate, the apparent function of the induced carbonic anhydrase is to catalyze hydration of carbon dioxide and thus prevent depletion of cellular bicarbonate.  相似文献   

15.
Secreted yeast acid phosphatase is found to be an octamer under physiological conditions rather than a dimer, as previously believed. The octameric form of the enzyme dissociates rapidly into dimers at pH below 3 and above 5, or by treatment with guanidine hydrochloride or urea, without further dissociation of dimers. Crosslinking experiments revealed that the dissociation of the octamer occurs through very unstable hexamers and tetramers, showing that the octamer is built of dimeric units. Dissociation to dimer was in all cases accompanied with a loss of most of the enzyme activity. The underglycosylated acid phosphatase, with less than eight carbohydrate chains per subunit, secreted from cells treated with moderate tunicamycin concentrations, contained besides octamers a high proportion of the dimers. With decreasing levels of enzyme glycosylation, the proportion of dimers increases and the amount of octamers correspondingly decreases. Furthermore, underglycosylated octamers were found to be significantly less stable than the fully glycosylated ones. This showed that carbohydrate chains play a significant role in the octamer formation in vivo, and in stabilization of the enzyme octameric form.  相似文献   

16.
Alcohol oxidase of methylotrophic yeast is an FAD-containing enzyme. When in its active form, the enzyme is an octamer and located in the peroxisomes. To study the importance of FAD-binding on the activity, octamerization and intracellular localization of the enzyme, alcohol oxidase of Hansenula polymorpha was mutated in its presumed nucleotide-binding domain, which is formed by the N-terminal sequence. Whereas mutations of a glutamic acid residue (E42) reduced the stability of the octamer, it hardly affected enzyme activity and expression. However, replacements of three conserved glycines (G13, G15 and G18) and a conserved glutamic acid (E39) within the fold had severe effects. The mutations not only resulted in loss of enzyme activity but in reduced protein levels as well, probably due to decreased stability of the mutant alcohol oxidase. However, octamerization of the protein still occurred. The existence of inactive octameric proteins provides information about the formation pathway of this octameric flavoprotein.  相似文献   

17.
Most enolases are homodimers. There are a few that are octamers, with the eight subunits arranged as a tetramer of dimers. These dimers have the same basic fold and same subunit interactions as are found in the dimeric enolases. The dissociation of the octameric enolase from S. pyogenes was examined, using NaClO4, a weak chaotrope, to perturb the quaternary structure. Dissociation was monitored by sedimentation velocity. NaClO4 dissociated the octamer into inactive monomers. There was no indication that dissociation of the octamer into monomers proceeded via formation of significant amounts of dimer or any other intermediate species. Two mutations at the dimer-dimer interface, F137L and E363G, were introduced in order to destabilize the octameric structure. The double mutant was more easily dissociated than was the wild type. Dissociation could also be produced by other salts, including tetramethylammonium chloride (TMACl) or by increasing pH. In all cases, no significant amounts of dimers or other intermediates were formed. Weakening one interface in this protein weakened the other interface as well. Although enolases from most organisms are dimers, the dimeric form of the S. pyogenes enzyme appears to be unstable.  相似文献   

18.
Kinetic properties of cyanase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
P M Anderson  R M Little 《Biochemistry》1986,25(7):1621-1626
Cyanase is an inducible enzyme in Escherichia coli that catalyzes the hydrolysis of cyanate. Bicarbonate is required for activity, perhaps as a substrate, and the initial product of the reaction is carbamate, which spontaneously breaks down to ammonia and bicarbonate [Anderson, P. M. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2882]. The purpose of this study was to characterize the kinetic properties of cyanase. Initial velocity studies showed that both cyanate and bicarbonate act as competitive substrate inhibitors. A number of monovalent anions act as inhibitors. Azide and acetate appear to act as competitive inhibitors with respect to cyanate and bicarbonate, respectively. Chloride, bromide, nitrate, nitrite, and formate also inhibit, apparently as the result of binding at either substrate site. Malonate and several other dicarboxylic dianions at very low concentrations display "slow-binding", reversible inhibition which can be prevented by saturating concentrations of either substrate. The results are consistent with a rapid equilibrium random mechanism in which bicarbonate acts as a substrate, bicarbonate and cyanate bind at adjacent anion-binding sites, and both substrates can bind at the other substrate anion binding site to give a dead-end complex.  相似文献   

19.
The citric acid cycle enzyme, malate dehydrogenase (MDH), is a dimer of identical subunits. In the crystal structures of 2 prokaryotic and 2 eukaryotic forms, the subunit interface is conformationally homologous. To determine whether or not the quaternary structure of MDH is linked to the catalytic activity, mutant forms of the enzyme from Escherichia coli have been constructed. Utilizing the high-resolution structure of E. coli MDH, the dimer interface was analyzed critically for side chains that were spatially constricted and needed for electrostatic interactions. Two such residues were found, D45 and S226. At their nearest point in the homodimer, they are in different subunits, hydrogen bond across the interface, and do not interact with any catalytic residues. Each residue was mutated to a tyrosine, which should disrupt the interface because of its large size. All mutants were cloned and purified to homogeneity from an mdh- E. coli strain (BHB111). Gel filtration of the mutants show that D45Y and D45Y/S226Y are both monomers, whereas the S226Y mutant remains a dimer. The monomeric D45Y and D45Y/S226Y mutants have 14,000- and 17,500-fold less specific activity, respectively, than the native enzyme. The dimeric S226Y has only 1.4-fold less specific activity. All forms crystallized, indicating they were not random coils. Data have been collected to 2.8 A resolution for the D45Y mutant. The mutant is not isomorphous with the native protein and work is underway to solve the structure by molecular replacement.  相似文献   

20.
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