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1.
Thymidylate synthase (TS) is a long-standing target for anticancer drugs and is of interest for its rich mechanistic features. The enzyme catalyzes the conversion of dUMP to dTMP using the co-enzyme methylenetetrahydrofolate, and is perhaps the best studied of enzymes that catalyze carbon-carbon bond formation. Arg 126 is found in all TSs but forms only 1 of 13 hydrogen bonds to dUMP during catalysis, and just one of seven to the phosphate group alone. Despite this, when Arg 126 of TS from Escherichia coli was changed to glutamate (R126E), the resulting protein had kcat reduced 2000-fold and Km reduced 600-fold. The crystal structure of R126E was determined under two conditions--in the absence of bound ligand (2.4 A resolution), and with dUMP and the antifolate CB3717 (2.2 A resolution). The first crystals, which did not contain dUMP despite its presence in the crystallization drop, displayed Glu 126 in a position to sterically and electrostatically interfere with binding of the dUMP phosphate. The second crystals contained both dUMP and CB3717 in the active site, but Glu 126 formed three hydrogen bonds to nearby residues (two through water) and was in a position that partially overlapped with the normal phosphate binding site, resulting in a approximately 1 A shift in the phosphate group. Interestingly, the protein displayed the typical ligand-induced conformational change, and the covalent bond to Cys 146 was present in one of the protein's two active sites.  相似文献   

2.
D-Amino acid transaminase is a bacterial enzyme that uses pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) as a cofactor to catalyze the conversion of D-amino acids into their corresponding alpha-keto acids. This enzyme has already been established as a target for novel antibacterial agents through suicide inactivation by a number of compounds. To improve their potency and specificity, the detailed enzyme mechanism, especially the role of its PLP cofactor, is under investigation. Many PLP-dependent transaminases have a negatively charged amino acid residue forming a salt-bridge with the pyridine nitrogen of its cofactor that promotes its protonation to stabilize the formation of a ketimine intermediate, which is subsequently hydrolyzed in the normal transaminase reaction pathway. However, alanine racemase has a positively charged arginine held rigidly in place by an extensive hydrogen bond network that may destabilize the ketimine intermediate, and make it too short-lived for a transaminase type of hydrolysis to occur. To test this hypothesis, we changed Glu-177 into a titratable, positively charged lysine (E177K). The crystal structure of this mutant shows that the positive charge of the newly introduced lysine side chain points away from the nitrogen of the cofactor, which may be due to electrostatic repulsions not being overcome by a hydrogen bond network such as found in alanine racemase. This mutation makes the active site more accessible, as exemplified by both biochemical and crystallographic data: CD measurements indicated a change in the microenvironment of the protein, some SH groups become more easily titratable, and at pH 9.0 the PMP peak appeared around 315 nm rather than at 330 nm. The ability of this mutant to convert L-alanine into D-alanine increased about 10-fold compared to wild-type and to about the same extent as found with other active site mutants. On the other hand, the specific activity of the E177K mutant decreased more than 1000-fold compared to wild-type. Furthermore, titration with L-alanine resulted in the appearance of an enzyme-substrate quinonoid intermediate absorbing around 500 nm, which is not observed with usual substrates or with the wild-type enzyme in the presence of L-alanine. The results overall indicate the importance of charged amino acid side chains relative to the coenzyme to maintain high catalytic efficiency.  相似文献   

3.
Gln34, Gln224, Leu228, and Ser240 are conserved residues in the vicinity of bound IMP in the crystal structure of Escherichia coli adenylosuccinate synthetase. Directed mutations were carried out, and wild-type and mutant enzymes were purified to homogeneity. Circular dichroism spectroscopy indicated no difference in secondary structure between the mutants and the wild-type enzyme in the absence of substrates. Mutants L228A and S240A exhibited modest changes in their initial rate kinetics relative to the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that neither Leu228 nor Ser240 play essential roles in substrate binding or catalysis. The mutants Q224M and Q224E exhibited no significant change in KmGTP and KmASP and modest changes in KmIMP relative to the wild-type enzyme. However, kcat decreased 13-fold for the Q224M mutant and 10(4)-fold for the Q224E mutant relative to the wild-type enzyme. Furthermore, the Q224E mutant showed an optimum pH at 6.2, which is 1.5 pH units lower than that of the wild-type enzyme. Tryptophan emission fluorescence spectra of Q224M, Q224E, and wild-type proteins under denaturing conditions indicate comparable stabilities. Mutant Q34E exhibits a 60-fold decrease in kcat compared with that of the wild-type enzyme, which is attributed to the disruption of the Gln34 to Gln224 hydrogen bond observed in crystal structures. Presented here is a mechanism for the synthetase, whereby Gln224 works in concert with Asp13 to stabilize the 6-oxyanion of IMP.  相似文献   

4.
The x-ray crystal structure of the N-lobe of human serum transferrin has shown that there is a hydrogen bond network, the so-called "second shell," around the transferrin iron binding site. Tyrosine at position 85 and glutamic acid at position 83 are two nonliganding residues in this network in the human serum transferrin N-lobe (hTF/2N). Mutation of each of these two amino acids has a profound effect on the metal binding properties of hTF/2N. When Tyr-85 is mutated to phenylalanine, iron release from the resulting mutant Y85F is much more facile than from the parent protein. Elimination of the hydrogen bond between Tyr-85 and Lys-296 appears to interfere with the "di-lysine (Lys-206-Lys-296) trigger," which affects the iron binding stability of the protein. Surprisingly, mutation of Glu-83 to alanine leads to the absence of one of the normal iron binding ligands; introduction of a monovalent anion is able to restore the normal first coordination sphere. The missing ligand appears to be His-249, as revealed by comparison of the metal binding behaviors of mutants H249Q and E83A and structural analysis. Glu-83 has a strong H bond linkage with His-249 in apo-hTF/2N, which helps to hold the His-249 in the proper position for iron binding. Disabling Glu-83 by mutation to an alanine seriously disturbs the H bond network, allowing His-249 to move away. A monovalent anion can help reestablish the normal network by providing a negative charge near the position of Glu-83 to reach charge balance, so that ligand His-249 is available again for iron binding.  相似文献   

5.
Thymidylate synthase (TS) is a long-standing target for chemotherapeutic agents because of its central role in DNA synthesis, and it is also of interest because of its rich mechanistic features. The reaction catalyzed by TS is the methylation of dUMP, with the transferred methyl group provided by the cofactor methylenetetrahydrofolate (CH2THF). Recently, several crystal structure determinations and mechanistic studies have led to a deeper understanding of the TS reaction mechanism, and address the role of conformational change in TS catalysis and inhibition. Included among these structures are complexes of TS bound to substrate dUMP; cofactor CH2THF; the nucleotide analogs 5-fluoro-dUMP, 5-nitro-dUMP and dGMP; and the promising antifolates BW1843, ZD1694, and AG337. From these studies, a picture of TS emerges where ligand-induced conformational changes play key roles in catalysis by straining the thiol adduct that occurs during the reaction; by protecting the highly reactive reaction intermediates; and by providing a means to stabilize a high-energy conformer of the cofactor after initial binding of a low-energy conformer. The best inhibitors of TS also induce and stabilize a conformational change in TS. One inhibitor, BW1843, distorts the active site on binding, and intercalates into a hydrophobic patch between two mobile subdomains in the protein. Also discussed are recent developments in the cell biology and regulation of eukaryotic TS and the use of structure-based drug design in the development of the antifolates currently in clinical trial for the treatment of cancer.  相似文献   

6.
Intersubunit ion pairs are considered to be involved for maintaining a stable structure of the glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) from hyperthermophiles. In order to demonstrate an effect of intersubunit ion pairs on the structural stability, two kinds of mutation (T138E, Thr at position 138 was replaced by Glu; E158Q, Glu at position 158 was replaced by Gln) which add and remove ion pairs, respectively, were introduced into Pk-gdhA gene encoding GDH from Pyrococcus kodakaraensis KOD1. Addition of one ion pair (Pk-GDHA-T138E) increased the optimum temperature and thermostability. In contrast, Pk-GDH-E158Q showed lower optimum temperature and less thermostability than wild type GDH. Structure analysis of GDHs was performed by circular dichroism (CD) and indicated that all recombinant enzymes (Pk-GDH, Pk-GDH-T138E, Pk-GDH-E158Q) possess different structures from that of natural GDH. Upon heat treatment (60 degrees C, 2 h), the structures of Pk-GDH and Pk-GDH-T138E were converted to another form close to the natural structure. However, no structural conversion by heat treatment was observed in Pk-GDH-E158Q. These results indicate that intersubunit ion pairs play an important role in forming thermostable structure of Pk-GDH.  相似文献   

7.
The biological activity and cellular metabolism of ZD1694, a novel folate-based thymidylate synthase (TS) inhibitor, were analyzed in a human leukemia cell line, MOLT-3, and its antifolate-resistant sublines with different mechanisms of resistance to methotrexate (MTX), trimetrexate (TMQ) and N10-propargyl-5,8-dideazafolic acid (CB3717). MOLT-3/CB3717(40), which was selected for CB3717 resistance, demonstrated impaired membrane drug transport via reduced folate carrier (RFC) and lower accumulation of [3H]ZD1694-polyglutamates in the cells with a shift in the polyglutamate distribution profile to shorter chain length polyglutamates, indicating an alteration in polyglutamation capacity in this subline. Impaired RFC and reduced rate of polyglutamation could explain the cross-resistance (12-fold) of this subline to ZD1694. On the other hand, there was little or no cross-resistance to this drug in a subline (MOLT-3/TMQ800) reportedly resistant to TMQ through impaired membrane transport for TMQ and an increase in dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) activity. Total amount of ZD1694 polyglutamated to a level higher than diglutamate was approximately 1.7-fold higher in the TMQ-resistant cells than that in the parent cells, but a low degree of increase in TS activity in the cells counteracted the supposed increase in sensitivity to ZD1694. MOLT-3/TMQ800-MTX10000 cells, which were established by sequential exposure of the TMQ-resistant cells to MTX and were previously shown to amplify mutated DHFR with low affinity for MTX, showed a decreased accumulation of polyglutamated ZD1694 as compared with the parent line and this was consistent with cross-resistance to ZD1694 in this subline. Overproduction of variant DHFR scarcely influenced the sensitivity to this drug. These results indicate that ZD1694 could overcome antifolate resistance through a mechanism such as amplified DHFR activity, and the biological activity of this drug against the cells paralleled the amount of polyglutamated drug inside the cells. Determination of polyglutamation capacity in tumor cells may allow prediction of sensitivity to this drug.  相似文献   

8.
The stability properties of six natural mutants of the TEM-1 beta-lactamase have been studied. The glutamate to lysine substitution at positions 104 and 240 stabilize the enzyme. Conversely, the G238S mutant's decreased stability might reflect an altered conformation of the active site and thus be related to the modified substrate profile. The relative stability of the R164S and R164H mutants is explained by the formation of a hydrogen bond between these residues and Asp-179 conferring a somewhat different structure to the omega loop and thus also explaining the extended substrate profile of these mutants. The loss of stability of the R164H mutant with increasing pH values can be explained by the titration of a hydrogen bond between the N delta of His-164 and the O delta of Asp-179. The properties of the G238S + E104K double mutant which is the most active against third-generation cephalosporins result from a balance of destabilizing and stabilizing substitutions, and their effects seem to be additive. The behavior of the R164S + E240K mutant might be explained on the basis of a similar compensation phenomenon.  相似文献   

9.
We have determined structures of binary and ternary complexes of five Asn229 variants of thymidylate synthase (TS) and related their structures to the kinetic constants measured previously. Asn229 forms two hydrogen bonds to the pyrimidine ring of the substrate 2'-deoxyuridine-5'-monophosphate (dUMP). These hydrogen bonds constrain the orientation of dUMP in binary complexes with dUMP, and in ternary complexes with dUMP and the TS cofactor, 5,10-methylene-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrofolate. In N229 mutants, where these hydrogen bonds cannot be made, dUMP binds in a misoriented or more disordered fashion. Most N229 mutants exhibit no activity for the dehalogenation of 5-bromo-dUMP, which requires correct orientation of dUMP against Cys198. Since bound dUMP forms the binding surface against which the pterin ring of cofactor binds, misorientation of dUMP results in higher Km values for cofactor. At the same time, binding of the cofactor aids in ordering and positioning dUMP for catalysis. Hydrophobic mutants, such as N229I, favor an arrangement of solvent molecules and side-chains around the ligands similar to that in a proposed transition state for ternary complex formation in wild-type TS, and kcat values are similar to the wild-type value. Smaller, more hydrophilic mutants favor arrangements of the solvent and side-chains surrounding the ligands that do not resemble the proposed transition state. These changes correspond to decreases in kcat of up to 2000-fold, with only modest increases in Km or Kd. These results are consistent with the proposal that the hydrogen-bonding network between water, dUMP and side-chains in the active-site cavity contributes to catalysis in TS. Asn229 has the unique ability to maintain this critical network, without sterically interfering with dUMP binding.  相似文献   

10.
Electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) spectroscopy was used to investigate electron-nuclear coupling to the N epsilon of the proximal histidine (F8, His93) imidazole in oxyCo(II)-substituted distal histidine (E7, His64) mutants (His-->Leu, His-->Val, His-->Gly, His-->Gln) and recombinant wild-type human myoglobins (Mbs). Nuclear hyperfine and nuclear quadrupole coupling constants decrease in the order: H64L > H64V > or = H64G approximately H64Q > wild-type. The differences in couplings found for the four mutant proteins are correlated with the differences in polarity of the E7 side chain. On the basis of the relative orientation of the nuclear quadrupole and g tensors, obtained by computer simulation of ESEEM spectra, the Co-O-O bond angle of H64G and H64Q appears to be similar to that of oxyCo sperm whale Mb (and possibly wild-type human Mb) at room temperature [Hori et al. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 3636], while that in H64V and H64L is more obtuse. ESEEM measurements in D2O demonstrate the presence of a hydrogen bond between the distal histidine and bound O2 in the wild-type protein, as was found in oxyCo sperm whale and horse Mbs [Lee et al. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 7274]. This hydrogen bond leads to a reduction in the N epsilon coupling in the wild-type protein as compared to that in the E7 mutants. No hyperfine-coupled deuterons were found in any of the mutants, and therefore, the proposed hydrogen bond between bound O2 and the distal glutamine in H64Q [Ikeda-Saito et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 23641] could not be substantiated.  相似文献   

11.
5-Aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS) catalyzes the first step in the heme biosynthetic pathway in nonplant eukaryotes and some prokaryotes, which is the condensation of glycine with succinyl-coenzyme A to yield coenzyme A, carbon dioxide, and 5-aminolevulinate. ALAS requires pyridoxal 5'-phosphate as an essential cofactor and functions as a homodimer. D279 in murine erythroid enzyme was found to be conserved in all aminolevulinate synthases and appeared to be homologous to D222 in aspartate aminotransferase, where the side chain of the residue stabilizes the protonated form of the cofactor ring nitrogen, thus enhancing the electron sink function of the cofactor during enzyme catalysis. D279A mutation in ALAS resulted in no detectable enzymatic activity under standard assay conditions, and the conservative D279E mutation reduced the catalytic efficiency for succinyl-CoA 30-fold. The D279A mutation resulted in a 19-fold increase in the dissociation constant for binding of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor. UV-visible and CD spectroscopic analyses indicated that the D279A mutant binds the cofactor in a different mode at the active site. In contrast to the wild-type and D279E mutant, the D279A mutant failed to catalyze the formation of a quinonoid intermediate upon binding of 5-aminolevulinate. Importantly, this partial reaction could be rescued in D279A by reconstitution of the mutant with the cofactor analogue N-methyl-PLP. The steady-state kinetic isotope effect when deuteroglycine was substituted for glycine was small for the wild-type enzyme (kH/kD = 1.2 +/- 0.1), but a strong isotope effect was observed with the D279E mutant (kH/kD = 7.7 +/- 0.3). pH titration of the external aldimine formed with ALA indicated the D279E mutation increased the apparent pKa for quinonoid formation from 8.10 to 8.25. The results are consistent with the proposal that D279 plays a crucial role in aminolevulinate synthase catalysis by enhancing the electron sink function of the cofactor.  相似文献   

12.
The contribution of hydrogen bonding by peptide groups to the conformational stability of globular proteins was studied. One of the conserved residues in the microbial ribonuclease (RNase) family is an asparagine at position 39 in RNase Sa, 44 in RNase T1, and 58 in RNase Ba (barnase). The amide group of this asparagine is buried and forms two similar intramolecular hydrogen bonds with a neighboring peptide group to anchor a loop on the surface of all three proteins. Thus, it is a good model for the hydrogen bonding of peptide groups. When the conserved asparagine is replaced with alanine, the decrease in the stability of the mutant proteins is 2.2 (Sa), 1.8 (T1), and 2.7 (Ba) kcal/mol. When the conserved asparagine is replaced by aspartate, the stability of the mutant proteins decreases by 1.5 and 1.8 kcal/mol for RNases Sa and T1, respectively, but increases by 0.5 kcal/mol for RNase Ba. When the conserved asparagine was replaced by serine, the stability of the mutant proteins was decreased by 2.3 and 1.7 kcal/mol for RNases Sa and T1, respectively. The structure of the Asn 39 --> Ser mutant of RNase Sa was determined at 1.7 A resolution. There is a significant conformational change near the site of the mutation: (1) the side chain of Ser 39 is oriented differently than that of Asn 39 and forms hydrogen bonds with two conserved water molecules; (2) the peptide bond of Ser 42 changes conformation in the mutant so that the side chain forms three new intramolecular hydrogen bonds with the backbone to replace three hydrogen bonds to water molecules present in the wild-type structure; and (3) the loss of the anchoring hydrogen bonds makes the surface loop more flexible in the mutant than it is in wild-type RNase Sa. The results show that burial and hydrogen bonding of the conserved asparagine make a large contribution to microbial RNase stability and emphasize the importance of structural information in interpreting stability studies of mutant proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Inactivation of Escherichia coli isocitrate dehydrogenase upon phosphorylation at S113 depends upon the direct electrostatic repulsion of the negatively charged gamma-carboxylate of isocitrate by the negatively charged phosphoserine. The effect is mimicked by replacing S113 with aspartate or glutamate, which reduce performance (kcat/K(i).isocitrat/ Km.NADP) by a factor of 10(7). Here, we demonstrate that the inactivating effects of the electrostatic repulsion are completely eliminated by a second-site mutation, and provide the structural basis for this striking example of intragenic suppression. N115 is adjacent to S113 on one face of the D-helix, interacts with isocitrate and NADP+, and has been postulated to serve in both substrate binding and in catalysis. The single N115L substitution reduces affinity for isocitrate by a factor of 50 and performance by a factor of 500. However, the N115L substitution completely suppresses the inactivating electrostatic effects of S113D or S113E: the performance of the double mutants is 10(5) higher than the S113D and S113E single mutants. These mutations have little effect on the kinetics of alternative substrates, which lack the charged gamma-carboxylate of isocitrate. Both glutamate and aspartate at site 113 remain fully ionized in the presence of leucine. In the crystal structure of the N115L mutant, the leucine adopts a different conformer from the wild-type asparagine. Repacking around the leucine forces the amino-terminus of the D-helix away from the rest of the active site. The hydrogen bond between E113 and N115 in the S113E single mutant is broken in the S113E/N115L mutant, allowing the glutamate side chain to move away from the gamma-carboxylate of isocitrate. These movements increase the distance between the carboxylates, diminish the electrostatic repulsion, and lead to the remarkably high activity of the S113E/N115L mutant.  相似文献   

14.
The EcoRI endonuclease is an important recombinant DNA tool and a paradigm of sequence-specific DNA-protein interactions. We have isolated temperature-sensitive (TS) EcoRI endonuclease mutants (R56Q, G78D, P90S, V97I, R105K, M157I, C218Y, A235E, M255I, T261I and L263F) and characterized activity in vivo and in vitro. Although the majority were TS for function in vivo, all of the mutant enzymes were stably expressed and largely soluble at both 30 degrees C and 42 degrees C in vivo and none of the mutants was found to be TS in vitro. These findings suggest that these mutations may affect folding of the enzyme at elevated temperature in vivo. Both non-conservative and conservative substitutions occurred but were not correlated with severity of the mutation. Of the 12 residues identified, 11 are conserved between EcoRI and the isoschizomer RsrI (which shares 50% identity), a further indication that these residues are critical for EcoRI structure and function. Inspection of the 2.8 A resolution X-ray crystal structure of the wild-type EcoRI endonuclease-DNA complex revealed that: (1) the TS mutations cluster in one half of the globular enzyme; (2) several of the substituted residues interact with each other; (3) most mutations would be predicted to disrupt local structures; (4) two mutations may affect the dimer interface (G78D and A235E); (5) one mutation (P90S) occurred in a residue that is part of, or immediately adjacent to, the EcoRI active site and which is conserved in the distantly related EcoRV endonuclease. Finally, one class of mutants restricted phage in vivo and was active in vitro, whereas a second class did not restrict and was inactive in vitro. The two classes of mutants may differ in kinetic properties or cleavage mechanism. In summary, these mutations provide insights into EcoRI structure and function, and complement previous genetic, biochemical, and structural analyses.  相似文献   

15.
In order to clarify the roles of three cysteines in ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) from Pseudomonas putida biotype B, each of the cysteine residues has been changed to a serine residue (C69S, C81S, and C97S) by site-directed mutagenesis. All cysteine mutations caused only a slight decrease in the k(cat) value, with no significant change of Km for the substrate. Even modification of the sulfhydryl group with 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) has almost no effect on enzyme activity. These results demonstrate that none of the cysteines in the KSI from P. putida is critical for catalytic activity, contrary to the previous identification of a cysteine in an active-site-directed photoinactivation study of KSI. Based on the three-dimensional structures of KSIs with and without dienolate intermediate analog equilenin, as determined by X-ray crystallography at high resolution, Asp-103 was found to be located within the range of the hydrogen bond to the equilenin. To assess the role of Asp-103 in catalysis, Asp-103 has been replaced with either asparagine (D103N) or alanine (D103A) by site-directed mutagenesis. For D103A mutant KSI there was a significant decrease in the k(cat) value: the k(cat) of the mutant was 85-fold lower than that of the wild-type enzyme; however, for the D103N mutant, which retained some hydrogen bonding capability, there was a minor decrease in the k(cat) value. These findings support the idea that aspartic acid 103 in the active site is an essential catalytic residue involved in catalysis by hydrogen bonding to the dienolate intermediate.  相似文献   

16.
Protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are signal transduction enzymes that catalyze the dephosphorylation of phosphotyrosine residues via the formation of a transient cysteinyl-phosphate intermediate. The mechanism of hydrolysis of this intermediate has been examined by generating a Gln-262 --> Ala mutant of PTP1B, which allows the accumulation and trapping of the intermediate within a PTP1B crystal. The structure of the intermediate at 2.5-A resolution reveals that a conformationally flexible loop (the WPD loop) is closed over the entrance to the catalytic site, sequestering the phosphocysteine intermediate and catalytic site water molecules and preventing nonspecific phosphoryltransfer reactions to extraneous phosphoryl acceptors. One of the catalytic site water molecules, the likely nucleophile, forms a hydrogen bond to the putative catalytic base, Asp-181. In the wild-type enzyme, the nucleophilic water molecule would be coordinated by the side chain of Gln-262. In combination with our previous structural data, we can now visualize each of the reaction steps of the PTP catalytic pathway. The hydrolysis of the cysteinyl-phosphate intermediate of PTPs is reminiscent of GTP hydrolysis by the GTPases, in that both families of enzymes utilize an invariant Gln residue to coordinate the attacking nucleophilic water molecule.  相似文献   

17.
Cholesterol oxidase catalyzes the oxidation and isomerization of cholesterol to cholest-4-en-3-one via cholest-5-en-3-one. It has been proposed that His447 acts as the general base catalyst for oxidation, and that the resulting imidazolium ion formed acts as an electrophile for isomerization. In this work, we undertook an assessment of the proposed dual roles of His447 in the oxidation and isomerization reactions. To test its role, we constructed five mutants, H447Q, H447N, H447E, H447D, and H447K, that introduce hydrogen bond donors and acceptors and carboxylate bases at this position, and a sixth mutant, E361Q, to test the interplay between His447 and Glu361. These mutants were characterized using steady-state kinetics and deuterium substrate and solvent isotope effects. For those mutants that catalyze either oxidation of cholesterol or isomerization of cholest-5-en-3-one, the Km's vary no more than 3-fold relative to wild type. H447K is inactive in both oxidation (> 100,000-fold reduced) and isomerization assays (> 10,000-fold reduced). H447E and H447D do not catalyze oxidation (> 100,000-fold reduced), but do catalyze isomerization, 10(4) times slower than wild type. The k(cat) for H447Q is 120-fold lower than wild type for oxidation, and the same as wild type for isomerization. The k(cat) for H447N is 4400-fold lower than wild type for oxidation, and is 30-fold lower than wild type for isomerization. E361Q does not catalyze isomerization (> 10,000-fold reduced), and the k(cat) for oxidation is 30-fold lower than wild type. The substrate deuterium kinetic isotope effects for the wild-type and mutant-catalyzed oxidation reactions suggest that mutation of His447 to an amide results in a change of the rate-determining step from hydride transfer to hydroxyl deprotonation. The deuterium solvent and substrate kinetic isotope effects for isomerization indicate that an amide at position 447 is an effective electrophile to catalyze formation of a dienolic intermediate. Moreover, consideration of kinetic and structural results together suggests that a hydrogen bonding network involving His447, Glu361 and Asn485, Wat541, and substrate serves to position the substrate and coordinate general base and electrophilic catalysis. That is, in addition to its previously demonstrated role as base for deprotonation of carbon-4 during isomerization, Glu361 has a structural role and may act as a general base during oxidation. The His447, Asn485, Glu361, and Wat541 residues are conserved in other GMC oxidoreductases. Observation of this catalytic tetrad in flavoproteins of unknown function may be diagnostic for an ability to oxidize unactivated alcohols.  相似文献   

18.
Site-directed mutagenesis of the yeast V-ATPase A subunit   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To investigate the function of residues at the catalytic nucleotide binding site of the V-ATPase, we have carried out site-directed mutagenesis of the VMA1 gene encoding the A subunit of the V-ATPase in yeast. Of the three cysteine residues that are conserved in all A subunits sequenced thus far, two (Cys284 and Cys539) appear essential for correct folding or stability of the A subunit. Mutation of the third cysteine (Cys261), located in the glycine-rich loop, to valine, generated an enzyme that was fully active but resistant to inhibition by N-ethylmalemide, 7-chloro-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole, and oxidation. To test the role of disulfide bond formation in regulation of vacuolar acidification in vivo, we have also determined the effect of the C261V mutant on targeting and processing of the soluble vacuolar protein carboxypeptidase Y. No difference in carboxypeptidase Y targeting or processing is observed between the wild type and C261V mutant, suggesting that disulfide bond formation in the V-ATPase A subunit is not essential for controlling vacuolar acidification in the Golgi. In addition, fluid phase endocytosis of Lucifer Yellow, quinacrine staining of acidic intracellular compartments and cell growth are indistinguishable in the C261V and wild type cells. Mutation of G250D in the glycine-rich loop also resulted in destabilization of the A subunit, whereas mutation of the lysine residue in this region (K263Q) gave a V-ATPase complex which showed normal levels of A subunit on the vacuolar membrane but was unstable to detergent solubilization and isolation and was totally lacking in V-ATPase activity. By contrast, mutation of the acidic residue, which has been postulated to play a direct catalytic role in the homologous F-ATPases (E286Q), had no effect on stability or assembly of the V-ATPase complex, but also led to complete loss of V-ATPase activity. The E286Q mutant showed labeling by 2-azido-[32P]ATP that was approximately 60% of that observed for wild type, suggesting that mutation of this glutamic acid residue affected primarily ATP hydrolysis rather than nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

19.
High-resolution crystallographic data show that Glu 168 and Glu 211 lie on opposite surfaces of the active site from Lys 345. Two different proposals for general base catalysis have emerged from these structural studies. In one scheme, the carboxylate side chains of Glu 168 and Glu 211 are proposed to ionize a trapped water molecule and the OH- serves as the base [Lebioda, L., & Stec, B. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 2817-2822]. In the other proposal, the epsilon-amino group of Lys 345 functions in general base catalysis [Wedekind, J. E., Poyner, R. R., Reed, G. H., & Rayment, I. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 9333-9342]. Genes encoding site specific mutations of these active site residues of yeast enolase, K345A, E168Q, and E211Q, have been prepared. The respective protein products of the wild type and mutant genes were expressed in Escherichia coli and isolated in homogeneous form. All three mutant proteins possess severely depressed activities in the overall reaction- < 1 part in 10(5) of wild type activity. Properties of the three mutant proteins in partial reactions were examined to define more clearly the roles of these residues in the catalytic cycle. The K345A variant fails to catalyze the exchange of the C-2 proton of 2-phospho-D-glycerate with deuterium in D2O, whereas both the E211Q and E168Q mutant proteins are functional in this partial reaction. For E211Q and E168Q enolases, exchange is essentially complete prior to appearance of product, and this observation provides further support for an intermediate in the normal reaction. K345A enolase is inactive in the ionization of tartronate semialdehyde phosphate (TSP), whereas both E168Q and E211Q proteins alter the tautomeric state or catalyze ionization of bound TSP. Wild type enolase catalyzes hydrolysis of (Z)-3-chloro-2-phosphoenolpyruvate by addition of OH- and elimination of Cl- at C-3. This reaction mimics the addition of OH- to C-3 of phosphoenolpyruvate in the reverse reaction with the normal product. All three mutant proteins are depressed in their abilities to carry out this reaction. In single-turnover assays, the activities vary in the order K345A > E168Q > E211Q. These results suggest that Lys 345 functions as the base in the ionization of 2-PGA and that Glu 211 participates in the second step of the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
The 0.78 A structure of a serine protease: Bacillus lentus subtilisin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ultrahigh-resolution X-ray diffraction data from cryo-cooled, B. lentus subtilisin crystals has been collected to a resolution of 0.78 A. The refined model coordinates have a rms deviation of 0.22 A relative to the same structure determined at room temperature and 2.0 A resolution. Several regions of main-chain and side-chain disorder have been identified for 21 out of 269 residues in one polypeptide chain. Hydrogen atoms appear as significant peaks in the Fo - Fc difference electron density map, and carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen atoms can be differentiated. The estimated standard deviation (ESD) for all main-chain non-hydrogen bond lengths is 0.009 A and 0.5 degrees for bond angles based on an unrestrained full-matrix least-squares refinement. Hydrogen bonds are resolved in the serine protease catalytic triad (Ser-His-Asp). Electron density is observed for an unusual, short hydrogen bond between aspartic acid and histidine in the catalytic triad. The hydrogen atom, identified by NMR in numerous serine proteases, appears to be shared by the heteroatoms in the bond. This represents the first reported correlation between detailed chemical features identified by NMR and those in a cryo-cooled crystallographic structure determination at ultrahigh resolution. The short hydrogen bond, designated "catalytic hydrogen bond", occurs as part of an elaborate hydrogen bond network, involving Asp of the catalytic triad. While unusual, these features appear to have conserved analogues in other serine protease families although specific details differ from family to family.  相似文献   

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