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1.
To test whether a reaction involving the making and/or breaking of two bonds at two sites is concerted (and proceeds through a single transition state) or is stepwise (and involves a reaction intermediate in which only one bond has been made or broken), we have measured the isotopic fractionation at one site as a function of isotopic substitution at the other site. In the case of proline racemase, the discrimination against solvent deuterium in the product when the reaction is run in mixed H2O-D2O is measured for the reaction both of [2-1H]proline and of [2-2H]proline. The isotopic fractionation at the solvent site may in principle be smaller, the same, or larger, when the 2H-labeled substrate is used rather than the 1H substrate, and--depending upon the nature of the catalyzing groups--this information indicates whether the reaction is stepwise, or concerted, or whether an isotopically insensitive transition state is partially rate determining. Experimentally, we have found that the discrimination against solvent deuterium in the product L-proline is the same, whether D-[2-1H]proline or D-[2-2H]proline is the substrate. This result requires that the substrate and product "on-off" steps are faster than the racemization step and that the racemization reaction proceeds either in a concerted manner or in a stepwise fashion involving enzyme catalytic groups (e.g., thiols) having ground-state fractionation factors around 0.5.  相似文献   

2.
The isotope effects for the interconversion of L-proline and D-proline, catalyzed by proline racemase, have been determined in the saturated region with both [2-2H]proline and [2-3H]proline. The deuterium fractionation factors for each of the protons in flight have been obtained from two kinds of experiment: by measuring the rate of racemization of one [2-2H]proline enantiomer as it racemizes into an equilibrated pool of unlabeled proline and by measuring the deuterium content of a proline sample at the optical rotation maximum that occurs when an equimolar mixture of one deuterium-labeled enantiomer and the other unlabeled enantiomer runs to equilibrium. The tritium fractionation factors for each of the protons in flight have been determined from measurements of the rate of loss of tritium to the solvent as one [2-3H]proline enantiomer runs to equilibrium. Good agreement is found among the fractionation factors determined by each method. The deuterium fractionation factors for the two protons are not identical: that for the proton derived from L-proline is 0.375 and that for the proton derived from D-proline is 0.44. This difference has been confirmed by a double-competition experiment in which the optical rotation of a mixture of DL-[2-2H]proline and unlabeled DL-proline is followed with time. The rotation (initially zero) passes through a maximum, from which the ratio of the two fractionation factors (0.86) is obtained. These data, coupled with the equilibrium fractionation factor for the 2-position of proline (which has been determined to be 1.17), provide the transition-state factors for each of the in-flight protons, and delineate the nature of the transition state(s) for the enzyme-catalyzed racemization.  相似文献   

3.
Sucrose-phosphatase (SPP) catalyzes the final step in the pathway of sucrose biosynthesis in both plants and cyanobacteria, and the SPPs from these two groups of organisms are closely related. We have crystallized the enzyme from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 and determined its crystal structure alone and in complex with various ligands. The protein consists of a core domain containing the catalytic site and a smaller cap domain that contains a glucose binding site. Two flexible hinge loops link the two domains, forming a structure that resembles a pair of sugar tongs. The glucose binding site plays a major role in determining the enzyme's remarkable substrate specificity and is also important for its inhibition by sucrose and glucose. It is proposed that the catalytic reaction is initiated by nucleophilic attack on the substrate by Asp9 and involves formation of a covalent phospho-Asp9-enzyme intermediate. From modeling based on the SPP structure, we predict that the noncatalytic SPP-like domain of the Synechocystis sucrose-phosphate synthase could bind sucrose-6(F)-phosphate and propose that this domain might be involved in metabolite channeling between the last two enzymes in the pathway of sucrose synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
The X-ray structure of the complex formed between yeast 5-aminolaevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) and the inhibitor laevulinic acid has been determined at 2.15 A resolution. The inhibitor binds by forming a Schiff base link with one of the two invariant lysines at the catalytic center: Lys263. It is known that this lysine forms a Schiff base link with substrate bound at the enzyme's so-called P-site. The carboxyl group of laevulinic acid makes hydrogen bonds with the side-chain-OH groups of Tyr329 and Ser290, as well as with the main-chain >NH group of Ser290. The aliphatic moiety of the inhibitor makes hydrophobic interactions with surrounding aromatic residues in the protein including Phe219, which resides in the flap covering the active site. Our analysis strongly suggests that the same interactions will be made by P-side substrate and also indicates that the substrate that binds at the enzyme's A-site will interact with the enzyme's zinc ion bound by three cysteines (133, 135, and 143). Inhibitor binding caused a substantial ordering of the active site flap (residues 217-235), which was largely invisible in the native electron density map and indicates that this highly conserved yet flexible region has a specific role in substrate binding during catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
Human heart chymase, a chymotrypsin-like serine proteinase that hydrolyzes the Phe8-His9 bond in angiotensin I (Ang I) to yield the octapeptide hormone angiotensin II (Ang II) and His-Leu, is the most specific, efficient Ang II-forming enzyme described. Other mammalian chymases display a much broader substrate specificity. To better define its substrate specificity, we have mapped the extended substrate-binding site of human heart chymase using Ang I analogs. The enzyme has a preference for aromatic amino acids phenylalanine, tyrosine, and tryptophan at the P1 site. At the S2 subsite there is a significant preference for proline over hydrophobic or hydrophilic amino acids. There is no clear preference for hydrophobic or hydrophilic amino acids at the S'1 and S'2 subsites, but an Ang I analog containing a P'1 proline is not hydrolyzed and one with a P'2 proline is hydrolyzed poorly. An increasing reduction in reactivity occurs when the P position amino acids in Ang I are deleted sequentially from the N terminus. An increase or decrease in the length of the His-Leu leaving group also produces a marked decrease in reactivity. No single determinant in Ang I is preeminently required for efficient catalysis, but several factors acting synergistically appear to be important. Thus, we propose that ideal substrates for human heart chymase should contain the structure nXaa-Pro-[Phe, Tyr, or Trp]-Yaa-Yaa, where n greater than or equal to 6; Xaa = any amino acid; Yaa = any amino acid except proline. This structure exists in Ang I and neurotensin, both of which are good substrates for human heart chymase. These findings indicate that the selection of the scissile bond by the extended substrate-binding site of human heart chymase is more restricted than that in other chymases.  相似文献   

6.
Tanner JJ 《Amino acids》2008,35(4):719-730
The proline catabolic enzymes proline dehydrogenase and Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase catalyze the 4-electron oxidation of proline to glutamate. These enzymes play important roles in cellular redox control, superoxide generation, apoptosis and cancer. In some bacteria, the two enzymes are fused into the bifunctional enzyme, proline utilization A. Here we review the three-dimensional structural information that is currently available for proline catabolic enzymes. Crystal structures have been determined for bacterial monofunctional proline dehydrogenase and Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase, as well as the proline dehydrogenase and DNA-binding domains of proline utilization A. Some of the functional insights provided by analyses of these structures are discussed, including substrate recognition, catalytic mechanism, biochemical basis of inherited proline catabolic disorders and DNA recognition by proline utilization A.  相似文献   

7.
G Rudnick  R H Abeles 《Biochemistry》1975,14(20):4515-4522
Proline racemase catalyzes the interconversion of D- and L-proline. Previous studies in this laboratory have established that the reaction proceeds by means of a two-base mechanism in which one base on the enzyme removes the substrate alpha-hydrogen as a proton and the conjugate acid of another base donates a proton to the opposite side of the alpha-carbon (Cardinale, G.J., and Abeles, R.H., (1968), Biochemistry 7, 3970. An assumption of the proposed mechanism was that no proton exchange occurs from the enzyme-substrate complex. In the present study, we have shown that the rate of 3H release from DL-[alpha-3H]proline, in the presence of proline racemase, decreases with increasing proline concentrations. These results establish that release of the substrate derived proton from the enzyme occurs largely, possibly exclusively, after release of the product. Under initial velocity conditions, the rate of 3H release from L-[alpha-3H]proline is not reduced with increasing L-proline concentrations. Thus, the enzyme-bound proton derived from one isomer can only be "captured" by the other isomer. We conclude that there are two forms of the enzyme; one binds L-proline and the other D-proline. Release of the substrate derived proton from enzyme is more rapid than the interconversion of these two forms. These results are consistent with the previously proposed mechanism. Proline racemase is composed of similar subunits of mol wt 38,000 as determined by gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Equilibrium dialysis experiments detect only one substrate binding site for every two subunits. When the oxidized form of the enzyme, which is inactive and cannot bind substrate, is reduced by thiol to yield active enzyme, two cysteine sulfhydryl groups per dimer become available to react with iodoacetate. Inactivation of the enzyme occurs upon modification of one of these cysteines. All iodoacetate incorporation occurs at the same point in the primary sequence of the enzyme, and can be prevented by the presence of proline or pyrrole-2-carboxylate, a substrate analog. A model is proposed in which a single active site is formed by elements of two identical subunits. Although the data are consistent with this model, another interpretation, in which half of the subunits are nonfunctional, cannot be ruled out.  相似文献   

8.
The influence of substrate concentrations on aminoacylation pathways and substrate specificities was investigated in the acylation reaction catalyzed by isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase from yeast. For the cognate substrates isoleucine and tRNAIle two Km values each differing by a factor about five were determined; the higher values were observed at concentrations higher than 1 microM, the lower values below 1 microM isoleucine or tRNAIle, respectively. At substrate concentrations below 1 microM also kcat values of the isoleucylation reaction are lowered. With the noncognate substrates valine and tRNAVal such differences could not be detected. The substrate ATP did not show any change of its Km value as far as the reaction was measurable. Under six different new assay conditions orders of substrate addition and product release followed sixtimes a sequential ordered ter-ter steady-state mechanism with ATP as the first substrate to be added, isoleucine as the second, and tRNAIle as the third one; pyrophosphate is the first product to be released, isoleucyl-tRNA the second, and AMP the third one. In one case this mechanism was modified by a rapid equilibrium segment for addition of ATP and isoleucine. From kcat and Km values and from AMP formation rates discrimination factors for discrimination between tRNAIleII and tRNAValI as well as between isoleucine and valine were determined. In the first case discrimination factors can vary up to a factor of thirty by changes of tRNA or amino-acid concentrations, in the second case discrimination factors are practically invariant. The two different Km values are hypothetically explained by assumption of anticooperativity in a flip-flop mechanism. Two hypothetical catalytic cycles are postulated.  相似文献   

9.
T S Angeles  G A Roberts  S A Carr  T D Meek 《Biochemistry》1992,31(47):11778-11784
The rates of desorption of the substrate water from the binary enzyme-H2O and ternary enzyme-H2O-(peptide)substrate complexes for the two hydrolases, porcine pepsin and thermolysin, have been investigated using a novel technique, solvent isotope partitioning. The experimental design of this method was based on the protocol of Rose et al. [Rose, I. A., O'Connell, E. L., Litwin, S., & BarTana, J. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 5163-5168] wherein the binary enzyme-H2(18)O complex established in the "pulse" solution was diluted into a "chase" solution containing variable concentrations of peptide substrates in a large pool of H2(16)O. The extent of trapping of H2(18)O within the respective E-H2(18)O and E-H2(18)O-(peptide)substrate complexes was determined from mass spectrometric analysis of the hydrolytic products. Our data have shown that the substrate water molecule of pepsin is not exclusively retained in the catalytic cycle and it desorbs from the apo- and substrate-bound complexes at rates that are at least 10 and 4 times faster, respectively, than that of product formation. Similarly, the low trapping of H2(18)O in the carboxylic product of the thermolysin reaction is a consequence of the ready desorption of H2(18)O from the ternary E-H2(18)O-(peptide)substrate complex and the binary E-H2(18)O complex. We attribute these results to the loss of the reactant water molecule due to desolvation of the enzyme's active site upon substrate binding.  相似文献   

10.
For a variety of reasons including increased recognition of the large degree of association, by non-polar interaction, of enzymes with other cellular components such as membranes, enzymes are increasingly being investigated in mixed solvents less polar than water. Such solvents may be quite relevant because their polarity more nearly resembles the natural cellular microenvironment than does pure water. The single most important criterion in selecting a non-aqueous solvent is its compatibility with the maintenance of the enzyme's catalytic activity, which must be determined experimentally for each enzyme. Non-aqueous solvents have a variety of effects on enzymes: they may bind specifically, compete with substrate binding, dissociate multimers, shift an equilibrium between two enzyme conformations, alter the amount of helix, react with the enzyme, stabilize or destabilize the enzyme, and affect the rate of the catalytic reaction in several different ways. Typically, modest concentrations of hydroxylic solvents have little effect on rates, and may even enhance the rate significantly. Higher concentrations give lower rates, in a solvent-specific and enzyme-specific manner. Hydroxylic solvents may replace water as acceptor of a phosphoryl, glycosyl, or acyl group produced by a hydrolytic enzyme. Non-aqueous solvents also make it possible to run hydrolytic reactions in the reverse direction, forming a condensation product and water as a by-product. Non-aqueous solvents are being extensively used in cryoenzymology as antifreeze agents, in solubilizing and purifying enzymes, and to a lesser degree in two-phase systems in which the non-polar substrate is dissolved in the non-aqueous phase. Liquefied aqueous phenol is an extraordinary solvent for enzymes and other proteins. It is a powerful denaturant which rapidly and irreversibly extracts the enzyme into the phenol-rich phase of a phenol-water system. This property makes phenol useful for removing protein contaminants, and for detecting labile enzyme-substrate intermediates, by extracting substrate covalently bound to enzyme into the phenol-rich phase away from all other substrate, which generally remains in the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

11.
Solá RJ  Griebenow K 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(23):5303-5319
Although the chemical nature of the catalytic mechanism of the serine protease alpha-chymotrypsin (alpha-CT) is largely understood, the influence of the enzyme's structural dynamics on its catalysis remains uncertain. Here we investigate whether alpha-CT's structural dynamics directly influence the kinetics of enzyme catalysis. Chemical glycosylation [Solá RJ & Griebenow K (2006) FEBS Lett 580, 1685-1690] was used to generate a series of glycosylated alpha-CT conjugates with reduced structural dynamics, as determined from amide hydrogen/deuterium exchange kinetics (k(HX)). Determination of their catalytic behavior (K(S), k(2), and k(3)) for the hydrolysis of N-succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe p-nitroanilide (Suc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-pNA) revealed decreased kinetics for the catalytic steps (k(2) and k(3)) without affecting substrate binding (K(S)) at increasing glycosylation levels. Statistical correlation analysis between the catalytic (DeltaG( not equal)k(i)) and structurally dynamic (DeltaG(HX)) parameters determined revealed that the enzyme acylation and deacylation steps are directly influenced by the changes in protein structural dynamics. Molecular modelling of the alpha-CT glycoconjugates coupled with molecular dynamics simulations and domain motion analysis employing the Gaussian network model revealed structural insights into the relation between the protein's surface glycosylation, the resulting structural dynamic changes, and the influence of these on the enzyme's collective dynamics and catalytic residues. The experimental and theoretical results presented here not only provide fundamental insights concerning the influence of glycosylation on the protein biophysical properties but also support the hypothesis that for alpha-CT the global structural dynamics directly influence the kinetics of enzyme catalysis via mechanochemical coupling between domain motions and active site chemical groups.  相似文献   

12.
Enzymes from thermophilic organisms often are barely active at low temperatures. To obtain a better understanding of this sluggishness, we used DNA shuffling to mutagenize the trpC gene, which encodes indoleglycerol phosphate synthase, from the hyperthermophile Sulfolobus solfataricus. Mutants producing more active protein variants were selected by genetic complementation of an Escherichia coli mutant bearing a trpC deletion. Single amino acid changes and combinations of these changes improved growth appreciably. Five singly and doubly altered protein variants with changes at the N- and C-termini, or at the phosphate binding site, were purified and characterized with regard to their kinetics of enzymatic catalysis, product binding, cleavage by trypsin, and inactivation by heat. Turnover numbers of the purified variant proteins correlated with the corresponding growth rates, showing that the turnover number was the selected trait. Although the affinities for both the substrate and the product decreased appreciably in most protein variants, these defects were offset by the accumulation of high levels of the enzyme's substrate. Rapid mixing of the product indoleglycerol phosphate with the parental enzyme revealed that the enzyme's turnover number at low temperatures is limited by the dissociation of the enzyme-product complex. In contrast, representative protein variants bind and release the product far more rapidly, shifting the bottleneck to the preceding chemical step. The turnover number of the parental enzyme increases with temperature, suggesting that its structural rigidity is responsible for its poor catalytic activity at low temperatures. In support of this interpretation, the rate of trypsinolysis or of thermal denaturation is accelerated significantly in the activated protein variants.  相似文献   

13.
Lipase from the fungi Thermomyces (formerly Humicola) lanuginosa (TlL) is widely used in industry. This interfacial enzyme is inactive under aqueous conditions, but catalytic activation is induced on binding to a lipid-water interface. In order for protein engineering to design more efficient mutants of TlL for specific applications, it is important to characterize its interfacial catalysis. A complete analysis of steady-state kinetics for the hydrolysis of a soluble substrate by TlL has been developed using an interface different from the substrate. Small vesicles of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylglycero-sn-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG) or other anionic phospholipids are a neutral diluent interface for the partitioning of substrate and enzyme. TlL binds to these interfaces in an active or open form, thus implying a displacement of the helical lid away from the active site. A study of the influence of substrate and diluent concentration dependence of the rate of hydrolysis provides a basis for the determination of the primary interfacial catalytic parameters. The interfacial activation is not supported by zwitterionic vesicles or by large anionic vesicles of 100 nm diameter, although TlL binds to these interfaces. Using a combination of fluorescence-based techniques applied to several mutants of TlL with different tryptophan residues we have shown that TlL binds to phospholipid vesicles in different forms rendering different catalytic activities, and that the open lid conformation is achieved and stabilized by a combination of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions between the enzyme's lipid-binding face and the interface.  相似文献   

14.
Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are multimodular proteins capable of producing important peptide natural products. Using an assembly line process, the amino acid substrate and peptide intermediates are passed between the active sites of different catalytic domains of the NRPS while bound covalently to a peptidyl carrier protein (PCP) domain. Examination of the linker sequences that join the NRPS adenylation and PCP domains identified several conserved proline residues that are not found in standalone adenylation domains. We examined the roles of these proline residues and neighboring conserved sequences through mutagenesis and biochemical analysis of the reaction catalyzed by the adenylation domain and the fully reconstituted NRPS pathway. In particular, we identified a conserved LPxP motif at the start of the adenylation‐PCP linker. The LPxP motif interacts with a region on the adenylation domain to stabilize a critical catalytic lysine residue belonging to the A10 motif that immediately precedes the linker. Further, this interaction with the C‐terminal subdomain of the adenylation domain may coordinate movement of the PCP with the conformational change of the adenylation domain. Through this work, we extend the conserved A10 motif of the adenylation domain and identify residues that enable proper adenylation domain function. Proteins 2014; 82:2691–2702. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
The important role of the serine/threonine protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) in various cellular processes requires a precise and dynamic regulation of PP2A activity, localization, and substrate specificity. The regulation of the function of PP2A involves the reversible methylation of the COOH group of the C-terminal leucine of the catalytic subunit, which, in turn, controls the enzyme's heteromultimeric composition and confers different protein recognition and substrate specificity. We have determined the structure of PPM1, the yeast methyltransferase responsible for methylation of PP2A. The structure of PPM1 reveals a common S-adenosyl-l-methionine-dependent methyltransferase fold, with several insertions conferring the specific function and substrate recognition. The complexes with the S-adenosyl-l-methionine methyl donor and the S-adenosyl-l-homocysteine product and inhibitor unambiguously revealed the co-substrate binding site and provided a convincing hypothesis for the PP2A C-terminal peptide binding site. The structure of PPM1 in a second crystal form provides clues to the dynamic nature of the PPM1/PP2A interaction.  相似文献   

16.
Bihani S  Das A  Prashar V  Ferrer JL  Hosur MV 《Proteins》2009,74(3):594-602
HIV-1 protease is an effective target for design of different types of drugs against AIDS. HIV-1 protease is also one of the few enzymes that can cleave substrates containing both proline and nonproline residues at the cleavage site. We report here the first structure of HIV-1 protease complexed with the product peptides SQNY and PIV derived by in situ cleavage of the oligopeptide substrate SQNYPIV, within the crystals. In the structure, refined against 2.0-A resolution synchrotron data, a carboxyl oxygen of SQNY is hydrogen-bonded with the N-terminal nitrogen atom of PIV. At the same time, this proline nitrogen atom does not form any hydrogen bond with catalytic aspartates. These two observations suggest that the protonation of scissile nitrogen, during peptide bond cleavage, is by a gem-hydroxyl of the tetrahedral intermediate rather than by a catalytic aspartic acid.  相似文献   

17.
Gerratana B  Stapon A  Townsend CA 《Biochemistry》2003,42(25):7836-7847
The Erwinia carotorova carA, carB, and carC gene products are essential for the biosynthesis of (5R)-carbapen-2-em-3-carboxylic acid, the simplest carbapenem beta-lactam antibiotic. CarA (hereafter named carbapenam synthetase) has been proposed to catalyze formation of (3S,5S)-carbapenam-3-carboxylic acid from (2S,5S)-5-carboxymethyl proline based on characterization of the products of fermentation experiments in Escherichia coli cells transformed with pET24a/carB and pET24a/carAB, and on sequence homology to beta-lactam synthetase, an enzyme that catalyzes formation of a monocyclic beta-lactam ring with concomitant ATP hydrolysis. In this study, we have purified recombinant carbapenam synthetase and shown in vitro that it catalyzes the ATP-dependent formation of (3S,5S)-carbapenam-3-carboxylic acid from (2S,5S)-5-carboxymethyl proline. The kinetic mechanism is Bi-Ter where ATP is the first substrate to bind followed by (2S,5S)-5-carboxymethyl proline and PPi is the last product released based on initial velocity, product and dead-end inhibition studies. The reactions catalyzed by carbapenam synthetase with different diastereomers of the natural substrate and with alternate alpha-amino diacid substrates were studied by HPLC, ESI mass spectrometry, and steady-state kinetic analysis. On the basis of these results, we have proposed a role for each moiety of (2S,5S)-5-carboxymethyl proline for binding to the active site of carbapenam synthetase. Coupled enzyme assays of AMP and pyrophosphate release in the reactions catalyzed by carbapenam synthetase with adipic and glutaric acid, which lack the alpha-amino group, in the presence and absence of hydroxylamine support the formation of an acyladenylate intermediate in the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

18.
The X-ray structure of the catalytic domain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A (PE24) has recently been solved to high resolution, facilitating studies on the interaction of PE24 with its target substrate, eukaryotic elongation factor-2 (eEF-2). PE24 exhibits mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase (ADPRT) activity in a mechanism that has been proposed to feature a nucleophilic attack by the diphthamide residue (nucleophile) of eEF-2 on the C-1 of the nicotinamide ribose of NAD(+). The interaction of wheat germ eEF-2 with PE24 was studied by employing an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), devised to assess protein-protein interactions. It was shown that the proteins associate with each other only in the presence of the enzyme's nucleotide substrate, NAD(+), and exhibit a dose-dependent association that is saturable. The apparent dissociation constant (K(d)) for this protein-protein interaction is 50 nM and is salt-dependent. The association is maximal at low ionic strength and is progressively weaker at higher salt concentrations, which corroborates previous findings on the salt dependence of ADPRT activity for this toxin. This finding suggests that the sensitivity of ADPRT activity toward high salt resides in the interaction between the catalytic domain of the toxin and eEF-2. A major product of the glycohydrolase activity of PE24, nicotinamide, inhibits the binding between PE24 and eEF-2 with an ID(50) of 20 microM. The naturally occurring, noncatalytic mutant of PE24, H426Y, did not bind eEF-2 in the ELISA, verifying that His 426 is located at the center of the eEF-2 binding site within ETA.  相似文献   

19.
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) terminates nerve-impulse transmission at cholinergic synapses by rapid hydrolysis of the neurotransmitter, acetylcholine. Substrate traffic in AChE involves at least two binding sites, the catalytic and peripheral anionic sites, which have been suggested to be allosterically related and involved in substrate inhibition. Here, we present the crystal structures of Torpedo californica AChE complexed with the substrate acetylthiocholine, the product thiocholine and a nonhydrolysable substrate analogue. These structures provide a series of static snapshots of the substrate en route to the active site and identify, for the first time, binding of substrate and product at both the peripheral and active sites. Furthermore, they provide structural insight into substrate inhibition in AChE at two different substrate concentrations. Our structural data indicate that substrate inhibition at moderate substrate concentration is due to choline exit being hindered by a substrate molecule bound at the peripheral site. At the higher concentration, substrate inhibition arises from prevention of exit of acetate due to binding of two substrate molecules within the active-site gorge.  相似文献   

20.
In Enterobacteriaceae, the ProP protein, which takes up proline and glycine betaine, is subject to a post-translational control mechanism that increases its activity at high osmolarity. In order to investigate the osmoregulatory mechanism of the Salmonella enterica ProP, we devised a positive selection for mutations that conferred increased activity on this protein at low osmolarity. The selection involved the isolation of mutations in a proline auxotroph that resulted in increased accumulation of proline via the ProP system in the presence of glycine betaine, which is a competitive inhibitor of proline uptake by this permease. This selection was performed by first-year undergraduates in two semesters of a research-based laboratory course. The students generated sixteen mutations resulting in six different single amino acids substitutions. They determined the effects of the mutations on the growth rates of the cells in media of high and low osmolarity in the presence of low concentrations of proline or glycine betaine. Furthermore, they identified the mutations by DNA sequencing and displayed the mutated amino acids on a putative three-dimensional structure of the protein. This analysis suggested that all six amino acid substitutions are residues in trans-membrane helices that have been proposed to contribute to the formation of the transport pore, and, thus, may affect the substrate binding site of the protein.  相似文献   

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