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1.
Adenylosuccinate lyase of Bacillus subtilis is inactivated by 2-[(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thio]adenosine 5'-monophosphate (2-BDB-TAMP) at pH 7.0. As the reagent concentration is increased, a maximum rate constant is approached, indicative of reversible enzyme-reagent complex formation (KR = 68 +/- 9 microM) prior to irreversible modification (kmax = 0.081 +/- 0.004 min-1). Complete inactivation occurs concomitant with about 1 mol of 2-BDB-[14C]TAMP incorporated/mol of enzyme subunit. Adenylosuccinate, or a combination of AMP and fumarate, decreases the inactivation rate and reduces incorporation of [14C] reagent, whereas either AMP or fumarate alone is much less effective. These observations suggest that 2-BDB-TAMP attacks the adenylosuccinate binding site. Proteolytic digestion of inactivated enzyme, followed by purification of the digest by HPLC, yields the radioactive peptide Ile62-Ala72, in which Arg67 and His68 are the most likely targets. Thus 2-BDB-TAMP reacts with adenylosuccinate lyase at a site distinct from the His141 attacked by 6-BDB-TAMP (Lee, Worby, Dixon, and Colman (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 458-465). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to construct mutant enzymes with replacements for both Arg67 and His68, and either Arg67 or His68. The R67M mutant enzyme has almost the same specific activity as the wild-type enzyme under standard assay conditions, whereas the single mutant H68Q and double mutant R67M-H68Q enzymes exhibit specific activities that are decreased more than 100-fold. These results indicate that while Arg67 and His68 may both be in the region of the substrate site, only His68 is important for the catalytic activity of B. subtilis adenylosuccinate lyase. A role is proposed for His68 as a general acid-base catalyst.  相似文献   

2.
Adenylosuccinate lyase of Bacillus subtilis is inactivated by 25-400 microM 6-(4-bromo-2,3-dioxobutyl)thioadenosine 5'-monophosphate (6-BDB-TAMP) at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. The initial inactivation rate constant exhibits nonlinear dependence on the concentration of 6-BDB-TAMP, implying there is reversible formation of enzyme-reagent complex (K(I) = 30 +/- 4 microM) prior to irreversible modification (kmax = 0.139 +/- 0.005 min(-1)). The tetrameric enzyme incorporates about 1 mol of 6-BDB-[32P]TAMP per mol of enzyme subunit concomitant with complete inactivation. Protection against inactivation and incorporation of [32P]reagent is provided by adenylosuccinate or a combination of AMP and fumarate, whereas either AMP or fumarate alone is much less effective. These observations suggest that 6-BDB-TAMP targets the adenylosuccinate-binding site. Hydrolyzed 6-BDB-TAMP is a competitive inhibitor with respect to adenylosuccinate in the catalytic reaction and also decreases the rate of inactivation by 6-BDB-TAMP. These results account for the decrease in the inactivation rate as the reaction of 6-BDB-TAMP with the enzyme proceeds. Purification by chromatography on dihydroxyboryl-agarose and high performance liquid chromatography of the tryptic digest of inactivated enzyme yields a single radioactive peptide, Thr140-Phe150, as determined by gas-phase sequencing. Modified His141 is the reaction product of 6-BDB-TAMP and adenylosuccinate lyase. We conclude that 6-BDB-TAMP functions as a reactive adenylosuccinate analog in modifying His141 in the substrate-binding site of adenylosuccinate lyase, where it may serve as a general base accepting a proton from the succinyl group during catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
Isocitrate lyase from Escherichia coli has been expressed in transformed E. coli JE10 cells lacking the isocitrate lyase (icl) gene. After directed mutagenesis of icl by the restriction-site elimination method, partially purified isocitrate lyase mutants in which His 356 has been converted to Lys, Arg, Gln, Asp, or Leu have been characterized after induction of transformed, induced JE10 cells. Values of kcat compared to those for wild-type (wt) enzyme (100) at 37 degrees C, pH 7.3, are 18, 1, <1, 0, and 0 for H356K, H356R, H356E, H356Q, and H356L mutant enzymes, respectively. Km values for the 1:1 Mg-isocitrate complex (in millimolar units) are: 0.13, wt; 0.11, H356K; and 0.63, H356R. Further chromatographic purification of isocitrate lyase yields highly purified wt, H356K, and H356R enzymes. The pH profile of the stability of isocitrate lyase, which has never been reported, showed that the H356R enzyme was unstable in the pH range investigated; the wt and H356R variant differed but each was sufficiently stable to study the pH dependence of catalysis. The log kcat/pH profiles for highly purified wt and H356K enzymes are roughly bell-shaped and have pKa and pKb values for dissociation of an ionizable group on the enzyme-substrate complex of <6.3 and 8.4 for wt and 5.9 and 7.9 for H356K enzymes. Plots of pKm vs pH were different for the wt and H356K variant. Values of pKa and pKb (derived from log kcat/Km plots vs pH) for the dissociation of an activity-related ionizable group on the variant were 5.3 and 7.6, whereas the analogous pKb value for the wt enzyme was 8.4. The data suggest that His 356 is an important functional residue in isocitrate lyase, perhaps in deprotonating isocitrate during catalytic cleavage.  相似文献   

4.
Treatment of rat liver arginase with N-bromosuccinimide results in modification of six tryptophan residues per enzyme molecule and is accompanied by loss of catalytic activity (E. Ber and G. Muzynska (1979) Acta Biochim. Pol. 26, 103-114). In order to probe the chemistry of N-bromosuccinimide inactivation and the role of tryptophan residues in catalysis, the two tryptophan residues of rat liver arginase, Trp122 and Trp164, have been separately mutated to phenylalanine using site-directed mutagenesis of the protein expressed in Escherichia coli. Both single Trp -> Phe mutant enzymes have kinetic parameters nearly identical to those for the wild-type enzyme. Treatment of native, wild-type, and each of the Trp -> Phe mutant enzymes with N-bromosuccinimide results in loss of absorbance at 280 nm and is accompanied by a loss of catalytic activity. However, treatment of the wild-type enzyme with N-bromosuccinimide in the presence of the arginase inhibitors NG-hydroxy-L-arginine or the combination of L-ornithine and borate protects against inactivation, even though tryptophan residues are modified. Treatment of the H101N and H126N mutant arginases with N-bromosuccinimide also results in loss of catalytic activity and modification of tryptophan residues. In contrast, the H141N mutant arginase is not inactivated by N-bromosuccinimide, indicating that His141 is the critical target for the N-bromosuccinimide inactivation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
We employed site-directed mutagenesis based on sequence comparisons and characterization of purified mutant enzymes to identify Glu558 and Asp766 of Syrian hamster 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase (EC 1.1.1.34) as essential for catalysis. Mutant enzymes E558D, E558Q, and D766N had wild-type Km values for (S)-HMG-CoA and NADPH, but exhibited less than 0.5% of the wild-type catalytic activity. The inactive mutant polypeptides E558Q and D766N nevertheless can associate to generate an active enzyme. In vitro, 6% of the wild-type activity was observed when mutant polypeptides E558D and D766N were mixed in the absence of chaotropic agents. When mutant polypeptides E558Q and D766N were co-expressed in Escherichia coli, the resulting purified enzyme had 25% of wild-type activity. Hamster HMG-CoA reductase thus is a two-site, dimeric enzyme whose subunits associate to form an active site in which each monomer contributes at least one residue (e.g. Glu558 from one monomer and Asp766 from the other). The wild-type enzyme behaves as a dimer during size exclusion chromatography and has one HMG-CoA binding site per monomer. Syrian hamster HMG-CoA reductase thus appears to be a homodimer with two active sites which are located at the subunit interface.  相似文献   

6.
Here we show that the substitution Thr 26-->His in the active site of T4 lysozyme causes the product to change from the alpha- to the beta-anomer. This implies an alteration in the catalytic mechanism of the enzyme. From the change in product, together with inspection of relevant crystal structures, it is inferred that wild-type T4 lysozyme is an anomer-inverting enzyme with a single displacement mechanism in which water attacks from the alpha-side of the substrate. In contrast, the mutant T26H is an anomer-retaining enzyme with an apparently double displacement mechanism in which a water molecule attacks from the opposite side of the substrate. The results also show that the mechanism of wild-type T4 lysozyme differs from that of hen egg-white lysozyme even though both enzymes are presumed to have evolved from a common precursor.  相似文献   

7.
A novel method based on electrospray mass spectrometry (Krell, T., Pitt, A. R., and Coggins, J. R. (1995) FEBS Lett. 360, 93-96) has been used to localize active site residues in the type I and type II dehydroquinases. Both enzymes have essential hyper-reactive arginine residues, and the type II enzymes have an essential tyrosine residue. The essential hyper-reactive Arg-23 of the Streptomyces coelicolor type II enzyme has been replaced by lysine, glutamine, and alanine residues. The mutant enzymes were purified and shown by CD spectroscopy to be structurally similar to the wild-type enzyme. All three mutant enzymes were much less active, for example the kcat of the R23A mutant was 30,000-fold reduced. The mutants all had reduced Km values, indicating stronger substrate binding, which was confirmed by isothermal titration calorimetry experiments. A role for Arg-23 in the stabilization of a carbanion intermediate is proposed. Comparison of the amino acid sequence around the hyper-reactive arginine residues of the two classes of enzymes indicates that there is a conserved structural motif that might reflect a common substrate binding fold at the active center of these two classes of enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase (EC 2.3.1.37) is the first enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway of animals, fungi and some bacteria. It functions as a homodimer and requires pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as an essential cofactor. In mouse erythroid 5-aminolevulinate synthase, lysine 313 has been identified as the residue involved in the Schiff base linkage with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate [Ferreira, G. C., et al. (1993) Protein Sci. 2, 1959-1965], while arginine 149, a conserved residue among all known 5-aminolevulinate synthase sequences, is essential for function [Gong & Ferreira (1995) Biochemistry 34, 1678-1685]. To determine whether each subunit contains an independent active site (i.e., intrasubunit arrangement) or whether the active site resides at the subunit interface (i.e., intersubunit arrangement), in vivo complementation studies were used to generate heterodimers from site-directed, catalytically inactive mouse 5-aminolevulinate synthase mutants. When R149A and K313A mutants were co-expressed in a hem A- Escherichia coli strain, which can only grow in the presence of 5-aminolevulinate or when it is transformed with an active 5-aminolevulinate synthase expression plasmid, the hem A- E. coli strain acquired heme prototrophy. The purified K313A/R149A heterodimer mixture exhibited K(m) values for the substrates similar to those of the wild-type enzyme and approximately 26% of the wild-type enzyme activity which is in agreement with the expected 25% value for the K313A/R149A coexpression system. In addition, DNA sequencing of four Saccharomyces cerevisiae 5-aminolevulinate synthase mutants, which lack ALAS activity but exhibit enzymatic complementation, revealed that mutant G101 with mutations N157Y and N162S can complement mutant G220 with mutation T452R, and mutant G205 with mutation C145R can complement mutant Ole3 with mutation G344C. Taken together, these results provide conclusive evidence that the 5-aminolevulinate synthase active site is located at the subunit interface and contains catalytically essential residues from the two subunits.  相似文献   

9.
Phosphorylation of the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, or protein kinase A, on Thr-197 is required for optimal enzyme activity, and enzyme isolated from either animal sources or bacterial expression strains is found phosphorylated at this site. Autophosphorylation of Thr-197 occurs in Escherichia coli and in vitro but is an inefficient intermolecular reaction catalyzed primarily by active, previously phosphorylated molecules. In contrast, the Thr-197 phosphorylation of newly synthesized protein kinase A in intact S49 mouse lymphoma cells is both efficient and insensitive to activators or inhibitors of intracellular protein kinase A. Using [35S]methionine-labeled, nonphosphorylated, recombinant catalytic subunit as the substrate in a gel mobility shift assay, we have identified an activity in extracts of protein kinase A-deficient S49 cells that phosphorylates catalytic subunit on Thr-197. The protein kinase A kinase activity partially purified by anion-exchange and hydroxylapatite chromatography is an efficient catalyst of protein kinase A phosphorylation in terms of both a low Km for ATP and a rapid time course. Phosphorylation of wild-type catalytic subunit by the kinase kinase activates the subunit for binding to a pseudosubstrate peptide inhibitor of protein kinase A. By both the gel shift assay and a [gamma-32P]ATP incorporation assay, the enzyme is active on wild-type catalytic subunit and on an inactive mutant with Met substituted for Lys-72 but inactive on a mutant with Ala substituted for Thr-197. Combined with the results from mutant subunits, phosphoamino acid analysis suggests that the enzyme is specific for phosphorylation of Thr-197.  相似文献   

10.
Endonuclease V is a pyrimidine dimer-specific DNA glycosylase-apurinic (AP)1 lyase which, in vivo or at low salt concentrations in vitro, binds nontarget DNA through electrostatic interactions and remains associated with that DNA until all dimers have been recognized and incised. On the basis of the analyses of previous mutants that effect this processive nicking activity, and the recently published cocrystal structure of a catalytically deficient endonuclease V with pyrimidine dimer-containing DNA [Vassylyev, D. G., et al. (1995) Cell 83, 773-782], four site-directed mutations were created, the mutant enzymes expressed in repair-deficient Escherichia coli, and the enzymes purified to homogeneity. Steady-state kinetic analyses revealed that one of the mutants, Q15R, maintained an efficiency (k(cat)/Km) near that of the wild-type enzyme, while R117N and K86N had a 5-10-fold reduction in efficiency and K121N was reduced almost 100-fold. In addition, K121N and K86N exhibited a 3-5-fold increase in Km, respectively. All the mutants experienced mild to severe reduction in catalytic activity (k(cat)), with K121N being the most severely affected (35-fold reduction). Two of the mutants, K86N and K121N, showed dramatic effects in their ability to scan nontarget DNA and processively incise at pyrimidine dimers in UV-irradiated DNA. These enzymes (K86N and K121N) appeared to utilize a distributive, three-dimensional search mechanism even at low salt concentrations. Q15R and R117N displayed somewhat diminished processive nicking activities relative to that of the wild-type enzyme. These results, combined with previous analyses of other mutant enzymes and the cocrystal structure, provide a detailed architecture of endonuclease V-nontarget DNA interactions.  相似文献   

11.
X-ray crystallography predicts hydrogen-bonding interactions between the side chains of Thr198 and two other amino acid residues, Glu194 (adjacent to the catalytic His195) and Ser318 (on the alpha-H helix which rearranges on substrate binding). In order to investigate the contribution of this conserved amino acid residue, Thr198, two mutants of Bacillus stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenase were created (Val198 and Ile198). The steady-state kinetic parameters for both mutant enzymes were very similar with increased substrate Km and reduced kcat when compared with the wild-type enzyme. The mutation Val198 allowed non-productive binding of pyruvate to the unprotonated form of His195. Steady-state kinetic parameters determined for the Val198 mutant enzyme in high solvent viscosity suggested both an altered rate-limiting step in catalysis and implicated Thr198 in allosteric activation by the effector fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (Fru1,6P2). A shift in the Fru1,6P2 activation constant for the Val198 mutant enzyme suggested that Thr198 stabilises the catalytically competent (Fru1,6P2-activated) form of the enzyme by 6.6 kJ/mol. However, Thr198 was not important for maintaining the thermal stability of the Fru1,6P2-activated form. Equilibrium unfolding in guanidinium chloride indicated that Thr198 contributes 17.2 kJ/mol subunits towards the tertiary structural stability. The results emphasise the importance of the side chain-hydroxyl group of Thr198 which is required for (a) productive substrate binding, (b) allosteric activation and (c) protein conformational stability. The characteristics of the B. stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenase mutations reported here were significantly different from those of the same mutations made in the corresponding position of the analogous enzyme Thermus flavus malate dehydrogenase [Nishiyama, M., Shimada, K., Horinouchi, S., & Beppu, T. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 14294-14299].  相似文献   

12.
Glutamate mutase is one of a group of adenosylcobalamin-dependent enzymes that catalyze unusual isomerizations that proceed through the formation of radical intermediates. It shares a structurally similar cobalamin-binding domain with methylcobalamin-dependent methionine synthase. In particular, both proteins contain the "DXHXXG" cobalamin-binding motif, in which the histidine provides the axial ligand to cobalt. The effects of mutating the conserved histidine and aspartate residues in methionine synthase have recently been described [Jarrett, J. T., Amaratunga, M., Drennan, C. L., Scholten, J. D., Sands, R. H., Ludwig, M. L., & Matthews, R. G. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 2464-2475]. Here, we describe how similar mutations in the "DXHXXG" motif of glutamate mutase affect coenzyme binding and catalysis in an adenosylcobalamin-dependent reaction. The mutations made in the MutS subunit of glutamate mutase were His16Gly, His16Gln, Asp14Asn, Asp14Glu, and Asp14Ala. All the mutations affect, in varying degrees, the rate of catalysis, the affinity of the protein for the coenzyme, and the coordination of cobalt. Mutations of either Asp14 or His16 decrease k(cat) by 1000-fold, and whereas cob(II)alamin accumulates as an intermediate in the wild-type enzyme, it does not accumulate in the mutants, suggesting the rate-determining step is altered. The apparent Kd for adenosylcobalamin is raised by about 50-fold when His16 is mutated and by 5-10-fold when Asp16 is mutated. There are extensive differences between the UV-visible spectra of wild-type and mutant holoenzymes, indicating that the mutant enzymes coordinate cobalt less well. Overall, the properties of these mutants differ quite markedly from those observed when similar mutations were introduced into methionine synthase.  相似文献   

13.
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been useful in establishing the phenotypic effects of specific mutations on the enzymatic activity and camptothecin sensitivity of yeast and human DNA topoisomerase I. To determine whether these phenotypes were faithfully reiterated in higher eukaryotic cells, wild-type and mutant yeast Top1 proteins were epitope-tagged at the amino terminus and transiently overexpressed in mammalian COS cells. Camptothecin preferentially induced apoptosis in cells expressing wild-type eScTop1p yet did not appreciably increase the cytotoxic response of cells expressing a catalytically inactive (eSctop1Y727F) or a catalytically active, camptothecin-resistant eSctop1vac mutant. Using an epitope-specific antibody, immobilized precipitates of eScTop1p were active in DNA relaxation assays, whereas immunoprecipitates of eScTop1Y727Fp were not. Thus, the enzyme retained catalytic activity while tethered to a support. Interestingly, the mutant eSctop1T722A, which mimics camptothecin-induced cytotoxicity in yeast through stabilization of the covalent enzyme-DNA intermediate, induced apoptosis in COS cells in the absence of camptothecin. This correlated with increased DNA cleavage in immunoprecipitates of eScTop1T722Ap, in the absence of the drug. The observation that the phenotypic consequences of expressing wild-type and mutant yeast enzymes were reiterated in mammalian cells suggests that the mechanisms underlying cellular responses to DNA topoisomerase I-mediated DNA damage are conserved between yeast and mammalian cells.  相似文献   

14.
We have expressed and characterized a mutant of Xenopus laevis Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase in which four highly conserved charged residues belonging to the electrostatic loop have been replaced by neutral side chains: Lys120 --> Leu, Asp130 --> Gln, Glu131 --> Gln, and Lys134 --> Thr. At low ionic strength, the mutant enzyme is one of the fastest superoxide dismutases ever assayed (k = 6.7 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1), at pH 7 and mu = 0.02 M). Brownian dynamics simulations give rise to identical enzyme-substrate association rates for both wild-type and mutant enzymes, ruling out the possibility that enhancement of the activity is due to pure electrostatic factors. Comparative analysis of the experimental catalytic rate of the quadruple and single mutants reveals the nonadditivity of the mutation effects, indicating that the hyperefficiency of the mutant is due to a decrease of the energy barrier and/or to an alternative pathway for the diffusion of superoxide within the active site channel. At physiological ionic strength the catalytic rate of the mutant at neutral pH is similar to that of the wild-type enzyme as it is to the catalytic rate pH dependence. Moreover, mutation effects are additive. These results show that, at physiological salt conditions, electrostatic loop charged residues do not influence the diffusion pathway of the substrate and, if concomitantly neutralized, are not essential for high catalytic efficiency of the enzyme, pointing out the role of the metal cluster and of the invariant Arg141 in determining the local electrostatic forces facilitating the diffusion of the substrate towards the active site.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Alignments of the amino acid sequences of subunit I (FixN or CcoN) of the cbb3-type oxidases show 12 conserved histidines. Six of them are diagnostic of heme-copper oxidases and are thought to bind the following cofactors: the low spin heme B and the binuclear high spin heme B-CuB center. The other six are FixN(CcoN)-specific and their function is unknown. To analyze the contribution of these 12 invariant histidines of FixN in cofactor binding and function of the Bradyrhizobium japonicum cbb3-type oxidase, they were substituted by valine or alanine by site-directed mutagenesis. The H131A mutant enzyme had already been reported previously to be defective in oxidase assembly and function (Zufferey, R., Th?ny-Meyer, L., and Hennecke, H. (1996) FEBS Lett. 394, 349-352). Four of the remaining histidines were not essential for activity or assembly (positions 226, 246, 333, and 457); by contrast, histidines 331, 410, and 418 were required both for activity and stability of the enzyme. The last group of mutant enzymes, H420A, H280A, H330A, and H316V, were assembled but not functional. To purify the latter mutant proteins and the wild-type enzyme, a six-histidine tag was added to the C terminus of subunit I. The His6-tagged cbb3-oxidase complexes were purified 20-fold by a three-step purification protocol. With the exception of the H420A mutant oxidase, the mutant enzymes H280A, H316V, and H331A contained normal amounts of copper and heme B, and they displayed similar visible light spectroscopic characteristics like the wild-type His6-tagged enzyme. The His6-tagged H420A mutant oxidase differed from the His6-tagged wild-type protein by showing altered visible light spectroscopic characteristics. No stable mutant oxidase lacking copper or heme B was obtained. This strongly suggests that copper and heme B incorporations in subunit I are prerequisites for assembly of the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
The temperature-conditional photosynthesis-deficient mutant 68-4PP of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii results from a Leu-290 to Phe substitution in the chloroplast-encoded large subunit of ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39). Although this substitution occurs relatively far from the active site, the mutant enzyme has a reduced ratio of carboxylation to oxygenation in addition to reduced thermal stability in vivo and in vitro. In an attempt to understand the role of this region in catalysis, photosynthesis-competent revertants were selected. Two revertants, named R96-4C and R96-8E, were found to arise from second-site mutations that cause V262L and A222T substitutions, respectively. These intragenic suppressor mutations increase the CO2/O2 specificity and carboxylation Vmax back to wild-type values. Based on the crystal structure of the spinach holoenzyme, Leu-290 is not in van der Waals contact with either Val-262 or Ala-222. However, all three residues are located at the bottom of the alpha/beta-barrel active site and may interact with residues of the nuclear encoded small subunits. It appears that amino acid residues at the interface of large and small subunits can influence both stability and catalysis.  相似文献   

18.
It has been suggested (Kini, R. R., and Evans, H. J. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 14402-14407) that the anticoagulant activity of members of the 14-kDa phospholipase A2 (PLA2) family depends on the presence of basic residues within a variable surface region (residues 54-77) distinct from both the conserved catalytic machinery and surface sites mediating the antibacterial action of these enzymes (see Weiss, J., Inada, M., Elsbach, P., and Crowl, R. M. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 26331-26337). To further define the determinants of the anticoagulant activity of PLA2, we have analyzed the inhibitory effects of purified native and recombinant PLA2 on cell-free prothrombinase. Both native and recombinant wild-type pig pancreas (net charge -1) and human "secretory" PLA2 (net charge +15) produced similar dose-dependent inhibition of prothrombinase activity that was significantly less potent than a toxic PLA2 purified from snake venom. Site-specific mutations that either increased or decreased PLA2 activity toward bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein-treated Escherichia coli by up to 50-fold had no effect on antiprothrombinase activity. In contrast, substitution of Arg for Asp-59/Gly for Ser-60 in the pig PLA2 increased antiprothrombinase activity by 5-10-fold without affecting catalytic activity toward a range of phospholipid substrates or antibacterial activity. Comparison of antiprothrombinase activity of catalytically active and inactive forms of the PLA2 and under a range of phospholipid conditions revealed that the potent antiprothrombinase activity of native toxic venom PLA2 and of the D59R.S60G mutant pancreatic PLA2 reflect combined catalytic and noncatalytic actions, the latter apparently dependent on basic residues at discrete surface sites in the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of dimeric bacterial D-amino acid transaminase shows that the indole rings of the two Trp-139 side chains face each other in the subunit interface about 10 angstroms from the coenzyme, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. To determine whether it has a role in the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme or interacts with the coenzyme, Trp-139 has been substituted by several different types of amino acids, and the properties of these recombinant mutant enzymes have been compared to the wild-type enzyme. In the native wild-type holoenzyme, the fluorescence of one of the three Trp residues per monomer is almost completely quenched, probably due to its interaction with PLP since in the native wild-type apoenzyme devoid of PLP, tryptophan fluorescence is not quenched. Upon reconstitution of this apoenzyme with PLP, the tryptophan fluorescence is quenched to about the same extent as it is in the native wild-type enzyme. The site of fluorescence quenching is Trp-139 since the W139F mutant in which Trp-139 is replaced by Phe has about the same amount of fluorescence as the wild-type enzyme. The circular dichroism spectra of the holo and the apo forms of both the wild-type and the W139F enzymes in the far-ultraviolet show about the same degree of ellipticity, consistent with the absence of extensive global changes in protein structure. Furthermore, comparison of the circular dichroism spectrum of the W139F enzyme at 280 nm with the corresponding spectral region of the wild-type enzyme suggests a restricted microenvironment for Trp-139 in the latter enzyme. The functional importance of Trp-139 is also demonstrated by the finding that its replacement by Phe, His, Pro, or Ala gives mutant enzymes that are optimally active at temperatures below that of the wild-type enzyme and undergo the E-PLP --> E-PMP transition as a function of D-Ala concentration with reduced efficiency. The results suggest that a fully functional dimeric interface with the two juxtaposed indole rings of Trp-139 is important for optimal catalytic function and maximum thermostability of the enzyme and, furthermore, that there might be energy transfer between Trp-139 and coenzyme PLP.  相似文献   

20.
1H NMR spectra of a series of distal point mutants of human and sperm whale deoxy myoglobin have been recorded and their spectral parameters compared with those of wild type. The substitutions investigated include His64(E7)-->Gly, Ala, Val, Leu, Ile, and Gln and Val68(E11)-->Ala, Ile. The three resonances from the proximal His F8 imidazole ring, as well as two heme methyl signals, are identified in each of the proteins. Significant perturbations of the NMR spectra of mutant deoxy myoglobins (Mbs) occurred only upon substitution of His64(E7) by any non-polar residue, with only minor variation in parameters throughout the range of side chains. These spectral changes are attributed to the elimination of a non-coordinated ordered water molecule in the distal pocket found hydrogen bonded to His64(E7) in crystals of wild-type deoxy Mb, but abolished in the His64(E7)-->Leu mutant deoxy Mb crystal (Quillin, M. L., Arduini, R. M., Olson, J. S., and Philips, G. N., Jr. (1993) J. Mol. Biol. 234, 140-155). The observed spectral changes, increased His F8 ring spin delocalization, and decreased heme in-plane asymmetry, can be directly attributed to the weakening of the effective axial field and a decrease in the asymmetry in the rhombic ligand field resulting from removal of the water molecule. The hyperfine shift patterns for the mutants His64(E7)-->Gln and Val68(E11)-->Ile deoxy Mbs are minimally perturbed from that of wild type and are interpreted to reflect a conserved distal water-binding site. In the point mutant Val68(E11)-->Ala, the decreased covalency to the axial His F8 is interpreted as reflecting a conserved distal water molecule that can interact more strongly with the iron due to the reduced steric bulk of the E11 side chain. The differential 1H NMR spectral parameters for the His F8 resonances in the two subunits of T state deoxy Hb A are shown to be similarly consistent with the known occupation of the distal water binding site in the alpha-, but not beta-subunit.  相似文献   

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