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1.
Pig kidney 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (Dopa) decarboxylase is inactivated by the arginine-specific reagent phenylglyoxal. Under these experimental conditions, the reaction follows pseudo-first-order kinetics with a second-order rate constant of 25 m-1 min-1. Holo- and apo-enzyme were inactivated at the same rate. However, inactivation seems to be related to modification of 1 and 2 arginyl residues per mol of holo- and apo-enzyme, respectively. Only one of these two residues was essential to decarboxylase activity of the enzyme. Phenylglyoxal-modified apo-Dopa decarboxylase retained the capacity to bind pyridoxal-P. Neither this reconstituted species nor the phenylglyoxal-modified holoenzyme were able to form Schiff base intermediates with aromatic amino acids in L and D forms. These data together with protection experiments suggest that the susceptible arginine residue in holoenzyme may somehow perturb the substrate binding site. However, unlike in other pyridoxal-P enzymes, this critical arginine in Dopa decarboxylase does not seem to behave as an anionic recognition site for the phosphate group of the coenzyme or the carboxy group of the substrate. It is speculated that this guanidyl group could function in hydrogen bonding of substrate side chain.  相似文献   

2.
Phenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione rapidly inactivate membrane-bound or soluble bovine heart succinate dehydrogenase. The inhibition of the enzyme by these reagents is completely prevented by saturating concentration of malonate. The modification of the active site sulfhydryl group by p-chloromercuribenzoate decreases the rate of the enzyme inhibition by phenylglyoxal and abolishes the protective effect of malonate. Kinetic data suggest that the inactivation by phenylglyoxal results from the modification of an essential arginine residue(s) which interacts with dicarboxylate to form the primary enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

3.
C L Borders  J F Riordan 《Biochemistry》1975,14(21):4699-4704
Treatment of rabbit muscle creatine kinase (EC 2.4.3.2) with either butanedione in borate buffer or phenylglyoxal in Veronal buffer decreases enzymatic activity correlating with the modification of a single arginyl residue per subunit of the dimeric enzyme. Very little activity is lost when modification is performed in the presence of MgATP or MgADP. Nucleotide binding to the modified enzyme is virtually abolished as determined by ultraviolet difference spectroscopy. The data suggest that an arginyl residue plays an essential role in the enzymatic mechanism of creatine kinase, probably as a recognition site for the negatively charged oligophosphate moiety of the nucleotide.  相似文献   

4.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is a non-heme iron enzyme that catalyzes oxidation of phenylalanine to tyrosine, a reaction that must be kept under tight regulatory control. Mammalian PAH has a regulatory domain in which binding of the substrate leads to allosteric activation of the enzyme. However, the existence of PAH regulation in evolutionarily distant organisms, for example some bacteria in which it occurs, has so far been underappreciated. In an attempt to crystallographically characterize substrate binding by PAH from Chromobacterium violaceum, a single-domain monomeric enzyme, electron density for phenylalanine was observed at a distal site 15.7 Å from the active site. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments revealed a dissociation constant of 24 ± 1.1 μM for phenylalanine. Under the same conditions, ITC revealed no detectable binding for alanine, tyrosine, or isoleucine, indicating the distal site may be selective for phenylalanine. Point mutations of amino acid residues in the distal site that contact phenylalanine (F258A, Y155A, T254A) led to impaired binding, consistent with the presence of distal site binding in solution. Although kinetic analysis revealed that the distal site mutants suffer discernible loss of their catalytic activity, X-ray crystallographic analysis of Y155A and F258A, the two mutants with the most noticeable decrease in activity, revealed no discernible change in the structure of their active sites, suggesting that the effect of distal binding may result from protein dynamics in solution.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Inactivation of pig kidney dipeptidyl peptidase IV (EC 3.4.14.5) by photosensitization in the presence of methylene blue at pH 7.5 was observed to have pseudo-first-order kinetics. During the process, until over 95% inactivation was achieved, the histidine and tryptophan residues were decreased from 14.0 to 2.7 and 12.6 to 7.1, respectively, per 94,000-Da subunit, without any detectable changes in other photosensitive amino acids. Modification of four histidine residues per subunit using diethylpyrocarbonate resulted in only 30% inactivation of the enzyme, while N-bromosuccinimide almost completely inactivated the enzyme with the modification of only one tryptophan residue per subunit, as determined by absorption spectrophotometry at 280 nm. The protective action of the substrate and inhibitors such as Ala-Pro-Ala and Pro-Pro against the modification of tryptophan residues with N-bromosuccinimide was observed both fluorometrically and by measurement of activity. On the basis of these results it is suggested that one of the tryptophan residues in the enzyme subunit is essential for the functioning of the substrate binding site of pig kidney dipeptidyl peptidase IV.  相似文献   

7.
Escherichia coli acetate kinase (ATP: acetate phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.2.1.) was inactivated in the presence of either 2,3-butanedione in borate buffer or phenylglyoxal in triethanolamine buffer. When incubated with 9.4 mM phenylglyoxal or 5.1 mM butanedione, the enzyme lost its activity with an apparent rate constant of inactivation of 0.079 min-1, respectively. The loss of enzymatic activity was concomitant with the loss of an arginine residue per active site. Phosphorylated substrates of acetate kinase, ATP, ADP and acetylphosphate as well as AMP markedly decreased the rate of inactivation by both phenylglyoxal and butanedione. Acetate neither provided any protection nor affected the protection rendered by the adenine nucleotides. However, it interfered with the protection afforded by acetylphosphate. These data suggest that an arginine residue is located at the active site of acetate kinase and is essential for its catalytic activity, probably as a binding site for the negatively charged phosphate group of the substrates.  相似文献   

8.
The objective of the present study is to delineate the role of active site arginine and histidine residues of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) in controlling iodide oxidation using chemical modification technique. The arginine specific reagent, phenylglyoxal (PGO) irreversibly blocks iodide oxidation following pseudofirst order kinetics with second order rate constant of 25.12 min-1 M-1. Radiolabelled PGO incorporation studies indicate an essential role of a single arginine residue in enzyme inactivation. The enzyme can be protected both by iodide and an aromatic donor such as guaiacol. Moreover, guaiacol-protected enzyme can oxidise iodide and iodide-protected enzyme can oxidise guaiacol suggesting the regulatory role of the same active site arginine residue in both iodide and guaiacol binding. The protection constant (Kp) for iodide and guaiacol are 500 and 10 M respectively indicating higher affinity of guaiacol than iodide at this site. Donor binding studies indicate that guaiacol competitively inhibits iodide binding suggesting their interaction at the same binding site. Arginine-modified enzyme shows significant loss of iodide binding as shown by increased Kd value to 571 mM from the native enzyme (Kd = 150 mM). Although arginine-modified enzyme reacts with H2O2 to form compound II presumably at a slow rate, the latter is not reduced by iodide presumably due to low affinity binding.The role of the active site histidine residue in iodide oxidation was also studied after disubstitution reaction of the histidine imidazole nitrogens with diethylpyrocarbonate (DEPC), a histidine specific reagent. DEPC blocks iodide oxidation following pseudofirst order kinetics with second order rate constant of 0.66 min-1 M-1. Both the nitrogens (, ) of histidine imidazole were modified as evidenced by the characteristic peak at 222 nm. The enzyme is not protected by iodide suggesting that imidazolium ion is not involved in iodide binding. Moreover, DEPC-modified enzyme binds iodide similar to the native enzyme. However, the modified enzyme does not form compound II but forms compound I only with higher concentration of H2O2 suggesting the catalytic role of this histidine in the formation and autoreduction of compound I. Interestingly, compound I thus formed is not reduced by iodide indicating block of electron transport from the donor to the compound I. We suggest that an active site arginine residue regulates iodide binding while the histidine residue controls the electron transfer to the heme ferryl group during oxidation.  相似文献   

9.
Reaction of phenylglyoxal with aspartate transcarbamylase and its isolated catalytic subunit results in complete loss of enzymatic activity. This modification reaction is markedly influenced by pH and is partially reversible upon dialysis. Carbamyl phosphate or carbamyl phosphate with succinate partially protect the catalytic subunit and the native enzyme from inactivation by phenylglyoxal. In the native enzyme complete protection from inactivation is afforded by N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate. The decrease in enzymatic activity correlates with the modification of 6 arginine residues on each aspartate transcarbamylase molecule, i.e. 1 arginine per catalytic site. The data suggest that the essential arginine is involved in the binding of carbamyl phosphate to the enzyme. Reaction of the single thiol on the catalytic chain with 2-chloromercuri-4-nitrophenol does not prevent subsequent reaction with phenylglyoxal. If N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate is used to protect the active site we find that phenylglyoxal also causes the loss of activation of ATP and inhibition by CTP. The rate of loss of heterotropic effects is exactly the same for both nucleotides indicating that the two opposite regulatory effects originate at the same location on the enzyme, or are transmitted by the same mechanism between the subunits, or both.  相似文献   

10.
UDP-glucose 4-epimerase from Saccharomyces fragilis was inactivated by the arginine-specific reagents phenylglyoxal, 1,2-cyclohexanedione, and 2,3-butanedione following pseudo first order reaction kinetics. The reaction order with respect to phenylglyoxal was 1.8 and that with respect to the other two diones was close to unity. Protection afforded by substrate and competitive inhibitors against inactivation by phenylglyoxal and the reduced interaction of 1-anilinonaphthalene 8-sulfonic acid, a fluorescent probe for the substrate-binding region after phenylglyoxal modification, suggested the presence of an essential arginine residue at the substrate-binding region. Experiments with [7-14C]phenylglyoxal in the presence of UMP, a ligand known to interact at the substrate-binding region, showed that only the arginine residue at the active site could be modified by phenylglyoxal. The characteristic coenzyme fluorescence of the yeast enzyme was found to be enhanced three times in phenylglyoxal-inactivated enzyme suggesting the incorporation of the phenyl ring near the pyridine moiety of NAD.  相似文献   

11.
Peptidyl dipeptidase-4 from Pseudomonas maltophilia was modified with the arginine reagents p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal and 2,3-butanedione. The enzyme was inactivated in a pseudo-first-order manner by p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal with a half-time of 72 min. Inactivation by 2,3-butanedione was biphasic with a rapid phase followed by a slower inactivation to less than 10% activity within 24h. The competitive inhibitor thiorphan protected against inactivation by phydroxyphenylglyoxal and by 2,3-butanedione also but to a lesser degree. Inhibitory anions chloride and phosphate did not protect against inactivation by either reagent. These data support the conclusion that an active site arginine is essential for substrate hydrolysis. Furthermore, arginine is not the binding site for the inhibitors chloride and phosphate.  相似文献   

12.
Chemical modification of adenylosuccinate synthetase from Escherichia coli with phenylglyoxal resulted in an inhibition of enzyme activity with a second-order rate constant of 13.6 M-1 min-1. The substrates, GTP or IMP, partially protected the enzyme against inactivation by the chemical modification. The other substrate, aspartate, had no such effect even at a high concentration. In the presence of both IMP and GTP during the modification, nearly complete protection of the enzyme against inactivation was observed. Stoichiometry studies with [7-14C]phenylglyoxal showed that only 1 reactive arginine residue was modified by the chemical reagent and that this arginine residue could be shielded by GTP and IMP. Sequence analysis of tryptic peptides indicated that Arg147 is the site of phenylglyoxal chemical modification. This arginine has been changed to leucine by site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzyme (R147L) showed increased Michaelis constants for IMP and GTP relative to the wild-type system, whereas the Km for aspartate exhibited a modest decrease as compared with the native enzyme. In addition, kcat of the R147L mutant decreased by a factor of 1.3 x 10(4). On the bases of these observations, it is suggested that Arg147 is critical for enzyme catalysis.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment of human prostatic acid phosphatase (orthophosphoric-monoester phosphohydrolase (acid optimum), EC 3.1.3.2) with either of the arginine-specific modifiers 2,3-butanedione or 1,2-cyclohexanedione in borate buffer at pH 8.1 leads to loss of activity. The inactivation by cyclohexanedione can be partially reversed by 0.2 M hydroxylamine. The rate of inactivation by both modifiers is decreased in the presence of the competitive inhibitors L-(+)-tartrate or inorganic phosphate but not in the presence of the non-inhibitor D-(-)-tartrate. Amino acid analysis of modified acid phosphatase indicates that only arginines are modified and that L-(+)-tartrate protects at least two arginyl residues from modification. A likely role of these arginyl residues is their involvement in binding the negatively charged phosphate group of the substrate.  相似文献   

14.
Rat liver ATP citrate lyase was inactivated by 2, 3-butanedione and phenylglyoxal. Phenylglyoxal caused the most rapid and complete inactivation of enzyme activity in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazine-ethanesulphonic acid buffer, pH 8. Inactivation by both butanedione and phenylglyoxal was concentration-dependent and followed pseudo- first-order kinetics. Phenylglyoxal also decreased autophosphorylation (catalytic phosphate) of ATP citrate lyase. Inactivation by phenylglyoxal and butanedione was due to the modification of enzyme arginine residues: the modified enzyme failed to bind to CoA-agarose. The V declined as a function of inactivation, but the Km values were unaltered. The substrates, CoASH and CoASH plus citrate, protected the enzyme significantly against inactivation, but ATP provided little protection. Inactivation with excess reagent modified about eight arginine residues per monomer of enzyme. Citrate, CoASH and ATP protected two to three arginine residues from modification by phenylglyoxal. Analysis of the data by statistical methods suggested that the inactivation was due to modification of one essential arginine residue per monomer of lyase, which was modified 1.5 times more rapidly than were the other arginine residues. Our results suggest that this essential arginine residue is at the CoASH binding site.  相似文献   

15.
Functional modification of an arginine residue on salicylate hydroxylase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Salicylate hydroxylase from Pseudomonas putida (EC 1.14.13.1, salicylate, NADH:oxygen oxidoreductase) is an FAD-containing monooxygenase, which catalyzes decarboxylative hydroxylation of salicylate to produce catechol in the presence of NADH and O2. By chemical treatment of the enzyme with dicarbonyl reagents, such as glyoxal, the original oxygenase activity was converted to the salicylate-dependent NADH-dehydrogenase activity with free FAD as electron acceptor. One of twenty arginine residues of this enzyme is concerned with this alteration of activity, as shown by the result of its modification at pH 6.9. This result is further supported by the isolation of one arginine-modified enzyme by chromatographic methods on DEAE-Sephadex, A-50 columns. It exhibits the dehydrogenase activity predominantly. This modified enzyme is spectrophotometrically and electrophoretically characterized by a minute conformational change around the active site, and kinetically by a 7-fold increase in an apparent Km for NADH and a decrease of more than 5-fold in an apparent Km for FAD as electron acceptor, with an apparent Vmax of 22 s-1 for the dehydrogenase activity. Flow kinetics also showed a marked decrease in the rate for oxygenation of the reduced enzyme-salicylate complex from 21 s-1 (native enzyme) to 3.3 s-1 (modified enzyme). These facts suggest that one arginine residue of the enzyme is responsible for the NADH binding site, and chemical modification of one arginine residue of the enzyme induces some conformational change around the active site to alter the catalytic activity from oxygenation to dehydrogenation.  相似文献   

16.
17.
In the previous paper we demonstrated that uridine-5'-beta-1-(5-sulfonic acid) naphthylamidate (UDPAmNS) is a stacked and quenched fluorophore that shows severalfold enhancement of fluorescence in a stretched conformation. UDPAmNS was found to be a powerful competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.2 mM) for UDP-glucose-4-epimerase from Escherichia coli. This active site-directed fluorophore assumed a stretched conformation on the enzyme surface, as was evidenced by full enhancement of fluorescence in saturating enzyme concentration. Complete displacement of the fluorophore by UDP suggested it to bind to the substrate binding site of the active site. Analysis of inactivation kinetics in presence of alpha,beta-diones such as phenylglyoxal, cyclohaxanedione, and 2,3-butadione suggested involvement of the essential arginine residue in the overall catalytic process. From spectral analysis, loss of activity could also be directly correlated with modification of only one arginine residue. Protection experiments with UDP showed the arginine residue to be located in the uridyl phosphate binding subsite. Unlike the native enzyme, the modified enzyme failed to show any enhancement of fluorescence with UDPAmNS clearly demonstrating the role of the essential arginine residue in stretching and binding of the substrate. The potential usefulness of such stacked and quenched nucleotide fluorophores has been discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Chemical modifications have demonstrated that the ultraviolet difference spectrum produced when heparin interacts with antithrombin III is due primarily to changes in the tryptophan environment. This is based on the observation that this spectrum could be abolished by treatment of antithrombin III with dimethyl (2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl) sulfonium bromide but not with tetranitromethane. The tryptophan-modified antithrombin III is still capable of binding to thrombin even when it has lost 85% of heparin cofactor activity. A marked decrease in reactivity of tryptophan residues is observed when modification is carried out in the presence of heparin. Evidence is presented that tryptophan is in the heparin binding site.  相似文献   

19.
Chemical modification was used to elucidate the essential amino acids in the catalytic activity of arginine kinase (AK) from Migratoria manilensis. Among six cysteine (Cys) residues only one Cys residue was determined to be essential in the active site by Tsou's method. Furthermore, the AK modified by DTNB can be fully reactivated by dithiothreitol (DTT) in a monophasic kinetic course. At the same time, this reactivation can be slowed down in the presence of ATP, suggesting that the essential Cys is located near the ATP binding site. The ionizing groups at the AK active site were studied and the standard dissociation enthalpy (ΔH°) was 12.38 kcal/mol, showing that the dissociation group may be the guanidino of arginine (Arg). Using the specific chemical modifier phenylglyoxal (PG) demonstrated that only one Arg, located near the ATP binding site, is essential for the activity of AK.  相似文献   

20.
1. Adenosine deaminase was inactivated by 9-(4-bromoacetamidobenzyl)-adenine (I) and 9-(2-bromoacetamidobenzyl)adenine (II), two affinity labels. 2. The stoichiometry of the reaction with reagent II is reported: 1 mol reagent is bound per mol inactive enzyme. Amino acid analysis of the 6 N HCl hydrolyzate of the inactive enzyme identified CM-histidine as the main alkylation product. This is the first evidence of the presence of a histidine in the active site region. 3. The alkylation rate and involved amino acid residues were studied for both reagents I and II, at pH 8 and 5.5. The particular reactivity of a lysine near or in the active site is discussed.  相似文献   

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