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1.
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   

2.
Horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase contains two tryptophan residues per subunit, Trp-15 on the surface of the catalytic domain and Trp-314 buried in the interface between the subunits of the dimer. We studied the contributions of the tryptophans to fluorescence and catalytic dynamics by substituting Trp-314 with a leucine residue and making two compensatory mutations that were required to obtain a stable protein, leading to the triple mutant M303F-L308I-W314L enzyme. The substitutions increased by two- to sixfold the turnover numbers for ethanol oxidation, acetaldehyde reduction, and the dissociation constants of the coenzymes. The rate of the exponential burst phase for the transient oxidation of ethanol increased slightly, but the rate of dissociation of the enzyme-NADH complex still limited turnover of ethanol, as for wild-type enzyme. The three substitutions at the dimer interface apparently activate the enzyme by allowing more rapid conformational changes that accompany coenzyme binding, probably due to movement of the loop containing residues 293 to 298. The emission spectrum of M303F-L308I-W314L enzyme, which contains Trp-15, was redshifted compared to wild-type enzyme. Time-resolved fluorescence measurements with the triple mutant show that the decay of Trp-15 is dominated by a approximately 7-ns component. In the mutant enzyme with Trp-15 substituted with phenylalanine, the decay of Trp-314 is dominated by a approximately 4-ns component. Solute quenching data for wild-type enzyme and the mutants show that only Trp-15 is exposed to iodide and acrylamide, whereas Trp-314 is inaccessible. The luminescence properties of the tryptophan residues in the mutated enzymes are consistent with conclusions from studies of the wild-type enzyme [M. R. Eftink, 1992, Adv. Biophys. Chem. 2, 81-114].  相似文献   

3.
Phenylalanine dehydrogenase from Thermoactinomyces intermedius and leucine dehydrogenase from Bacillus stearothermophilus show a 59% sequence similarity in their substrate-binding domains, although their substrate specificities are different. We prepared a phenylalanine dehydrogenase mutant enzyme whose inherent hexapeptide segment (124F-V-H-A-A-129R) in the substrate-binding domain was replaced by the corresponding part of leucine dehydrogenase (M-D-I-I-Y-Q) in order to investigate the mechanism of substrate recognition by phenylalanine dehydrogenase. The catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km) of the mutant enzyme with aliphatic amino acids and aliphatic keto acids as substrates were 0.5 to 2% of those of the wild-type enzyme. In contrast, the efficiencies for L-phenylalanine and phenylpyruvate decreased to 0.008 and 0.035% of those of the wild-type enzyme, respectively. These results suggest that the hexapeptide segment plays an important role in the substrate recognition by phenylalanine dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
In trimethylamine dehydrogenase, a homodimeric iron-sulfur flavoprotein, the C-terminal 17 residues of each subunit (residues 713-729) embrace residues on the other subunit. The role of this unusual mode of interaction at the subunit interface was probed by isolating three mutant forms of trimethylamine dehydrogenase in which the C-terminus of the enzyme was deleted by five residues [delta(725-729], 10 residues [delta(720-729)] and 17 residues [delta(713-729)]. The solution properties and conformational states of the three mutant enzymes were investigated using optical, fluorescence and circular dichroism spectroscopies, ANS binding and a novel and conformationally sensitive hydrodynamic method. The data reveal that sequential deletion of the C-terminus of trimethylamine dehydrogenase does not affect significantly dimer stability or the overall structural integrity of the enzyme. However, deletion of the C-terminus severely compromises, but does not abolish, the ability of the enzyme to become covalently coupled with the redox cofactor FMN in the active site, located over 20 A from the C-terminus. Hydrodynamic studies reveal minor conformational changes in the deletion mutants that lead to a more compact enzyme structure. These conformational changes are probably transmitted to the active site via altering the interaction of the C-terminus with the second helix in the beta/alpha barrel of trimethylamine dehydrogenase, leading to poor flavinylation during the folding of the enzyme and assembly with FMN.  相似文献   

6.
We have used localized mutagenesis of the biotin domain of the Escherichia coli biotin carboxyl carrier protein coupled with a genetic selection to identify regions of the domain having a role in interactions with the modifying enzyme, biotin protein ligase. We purified several singly substituted mutant biotin domains that showed reduced biotinylation in vivo and characterized these proteins in vitro. This approach has allowed us to distinguish putative biotin protein ligase interaction mutations from structurally defective proteins. Two mutant proteins with glutamate to lysine substitutions (at residues 119 or 147) behaved as authentic ligase interaction mutants. The E119K protein was virtually inactive as a substrate for biotin protein ligase, whereas the E147K protein could be biotinylated, albeit poorly. Neither substitution affected the overall structure of the domain, assayed by disulfide dimer formation and trypsin resistance. Substitutions of the highly conserved glycine residues at positions 133 and 143 or at a key hydrophobic core residue, Val-146, gave structurally unstable proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Many Oriental people possess a liver mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase where glutamate at position 487 has been replaced by a lysine, and they have very low levels of mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase activity. To investigate the cause of the lack of activity of this aldehyde dehydrogenase, we mutated residue 487 of rat and human liver mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase to a lysine and expressed the mutant and native enzyme forms in Escherichia coli. Both rat and human recombinant aldehyde dehydrogenases showed the same molecular and kinetic properties as the enzyme isolated from liver mitochondria. The E487K mutants were found to be active but possessed altered kinetic properties when compared to the glutamate enzyme. The Km for NAD+ at pH 7.4 increased more than 150-fold, whereas kcat decreased 2-10-fold with respect to the recombinant native enzymes. Detailed steady-state kinetic analysis showed that the binding of NAD+ to the mutant enzyme was impaired, and it could be calculated that this resulted in a decreased nucleophilicity of the active site cysteine residue. The rate-limiting step for the rat E487K mutant was also different from that of the recombinant rat liver aldehyde dehydrogenase in that no pre-steady-state burst of NADH formation was found with the mutant enzyme. Both the rat native enzyme and the E487K mutant oxidized chloroacetaldehyde twice as fast as acetaldehyde, indicating that the rate-limiting step was not hydride transfer or coenzyme dissociation but depended upon nucleophilic attack. Each enzyme form showed a 2-fold activation upon the addition of Mg2+ ions. Substituting a glutamine for the glutamate did not grossly affect the properties of the enzyme. Glutamate 487 may interact directly with the positive nicotinamide ring of NAD+ for the Ki of NADH was the same in the lysine enzyme as it was in the glutamate form. Because of the altered NAD+ binding properties and kcat of the E487K variant, it is assumed that people possessing this form will not have a functional mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The flavin-containing enzyme dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHOD) catalyzes the oxidation of dihydroorotate (DHO) to orotate, the first aromatic intermediate in pyrimidine biosynthesis. The first structure of a DHOD, the A form of the enzyme from Lactococcus lactis, has recently become known, and some conserved residues were suggested to have a role in the active site [Rowland et al. (1997) Structure 2, 239-252]. In particular, Cys 130 was hypothesized to work as a base, which activates dihydroorotate (DHO) for hydride transfer. By chemical modification and site-directed mutagenesis we have obtained results consistent with this proposal. Cys 130 was susceptible to alkylating reagents, and mutants of Cys 130 (C130A and C130S) showed hardly detectable enzyme activity at pH 8.0, while at pH 10 the C130S mutant enzyme had approximately 1% of wild-type activity. Mutants of Lys 43, Asn 132, and Lys 164 were also constructed. Exchange of Lys 43 to Ala or Glu (K43A and K43E) and of Asn 132 to Ala (N132A) affected both catalysis and substrate binding. Expressed as kcat/KM for DHO, the deterioration of these three mutant enzymes was 10(3)-10(4)-fold. Flavin spectra of the mutant enzymes were not, like the wild-type enzyme, bleached by DHO in stopped-flow experiments, showing that they were deficient with respect to the first half-reaction, namely reduction of FMN by DHO, which was not rate limiting for the wild-type enzyme. The binding interaction between flavin and the reaction product, orotate, could be monitored by a red shift of the flavin absorbance in the wild-type enzyme. The C130A, C130S, and N132A mutant enzymes displayed similar capacity to bind orotate. In contrast, orotate did not change the absorption spectra of the K43 mutant enzymes, although it did inhibit their activity. All of the mutant enzymes, except K164A, contained normal levels of flavin. The results are discussed in relation to the structures of DHODA and other flavoenzymes. The possible acid-base chemistry of Cys 130 is compared to previous work on mammalian dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenases, flavoenzymes, which catalyze the reversed reaction, namely the reduction of pyrimidine bases.  相似文献   

10.
We have used alpha-lytic protease as a model system for exploring the relationship between the internal dynamics of an enzyme and its substrate specificity. The wild-type enzyme is highly specific for small substrates in its primary specificity pocket, while the M190A mutant has a much broader specificity, efficiently catalyzing cleavage of both large and small substrates. Normal modes have been calculated for both the wild-type and the mutant enzyme to determine how internal vibrations contribute to these contrasting specificity profiles. We find that for the atoms lining the walls of the specificity pocket, the wild-type normal modes have a more symmetric character, with the walls vibrating in phase, and the size of the pocket remaining relatively fixed. This is in agreement with X-ray crystallographic data on conformational substates trapped at 120 K. In contrast, we find that in the mutant, the binding pocket normal modes have a more antisymmetric character, with the walls vibrating out of phase, and the pocket able to expand and contract. These results suggest that the internal vibrations of a molecule may play an important role in determining substrate binding and specificity. A small change in protein structure can have a significant effect on the pattern of molecular vibrations, and thus on enzymatic properties, even if the overall amplitudes of the vibrations, as measured by NMR relaxation or crystallographic B-factors, remain largely unchanged.  相似文献   

11.
The solution structure of His12 --> Cys mutant of the N-terminal zinc binding domain (residues 1-55; IN(1-55)) of HIV-1 integrase complexed to cadmium has been solved by multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. The overall structure is very similar to that of the wild-type N-terminal domain complexed to zinc. In contrast to the wild-type domain, however, which exists in two interconverting conformational states arising from different modes of coordination of the two histidine side chains to the metal, the cadmium complex of the His12 --> Cys mutant exists in only a single form at low pH. The conformation of the polypeptide chain encompassing residues 10-18 is intermediate between the two forms of the wild-type complex.  相似文献   

12.
The carbohydrate-binding cleft of Bacillus licheniformis 1,3-1, 4-beta-D-glucan 4-glucanohydrolase is partially covered by the surface loop between residues 51 and 67, which is linked to beta-strand-(87-95) of the minor beta-sheet III of the protein core by a single disulfide bond at Cys61-Cys90. An alanine scanning mutagenesis approach has been applied to analyze the role of loop residues from Asp51 to Arg64 in substrate binding and stability by means of equilibrium urea denaturation, enzyme thermotolerance, and kinetics. The DeltaDeltaGU between oxidized and reduced forms is approximately constant for all mutants, with a contribution of 5.3 +/- 0.2 kcal.mol-1 for the disulfide bridge to protein stability. A good correlation is observed between DeltaGU values by reversible unfolding and enzyme thermotolerance. The N57A mutant, however, is more thermotolerant than the wild-type enzyme, whereas it is slightly less stable to reversible urea denaturation. Mutants with a <2-fold increase in Km correspond to mutations at residues not involved in substrate binding, for which the reduction in catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) is proportional to the loss of stability relative to the wild-type enzyme. Y53A, N55A, F59A, and W63A, on the other hand, show a pronounced effect on catalytic efficiency, with Km > 2-fold and kcat < 5% of the wild-type values. These mutated residues are directly involved in substrate binding or in hydrophobic packing of the loop. Interestingly, the mutation M58A yields an enzyme that is more active than the wild-type enzyme (7-fold increase in kcat), but it is slightly less stable.  相似文献   

13.
Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase catalyzes, in the rate-limiting step of the pyrimidine degradation pathway, the NADPH-dependent reduction of uracil and thymine to dihydrouracil and dihydrothymine, respectively. The porcine enzyme is a homodimeric iron-sulfur flavoprotein (2 x 111 kDa). C671, the residue postulated to be in the uracil binding site and to act as the catalytically essential acidic residue of the enzyme oxidative half-reaction, was replaced by an alanyl residue. The mutant enzyme was overproduced in Escherichia coli DH5alpha cells, purified to homogeneity, and characterized in comparison with the wild-type species. An extinction coefficient of 74 mM-1 cm-1 was determined at 450 nm for the wild-type and mutant enzymes. Chemical analyses of the flavin, iron, and acid-labile sulfur content of the enzyme subunits revealed similar stoichiometries for wild-type and C671A dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenases. One FAD and one FMN per enzyme subunit were found. Approximately 16 iron atoms and 16 acid-labile sulfur atoms were found per wild-type and mutant enzyme subunit. The C671A dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase mutant exhibited approximately 1% of the activity of the wild-type enzyme, thus preventing its steady-state kinetic analysis. Therefore, the ability of the C671A mutant and, for comparison, of the wild-type enzyme species to interact with reaction substrates, products, or their analogues were studied by absorption spectroscopy. Both enzyme forms did not react with sulfite. The wild-type and mutant enzymes were very similar to each other with respect to the spectral changes induced by binding of the reaction product NADP+ or of its nonreducible analogue 3-aminopyridine dinucleotide phosphate. Uracil also induced qualitatively and quantitatively similar absorbance changes in the visible region of the absorbance spectrum of the two enzyme forms. However, the calculated Kd of the enzyme-uracil complex was significantly higher for the C671A mutant (9.1 +/- 0.7 microM) than for the wild-type dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (0.7 +/- 0.09 microM). In line with these observations, the two enzyme forms behaved in a similar way when titrated anaerobically with a NADPH solution. Addition of an up to 10-fold excess of NADPH to both dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase forms led to absorbance changes consistent with reduction of approximately 0.5 flavin per subunit, with no indication of reduction of the enzyme iron-sulfur clusters. Absorbance changes consistent with reduction of both enzyme flavins were obtained by removing NADP+ with a NADPH-regenerating system. On the contrary, the two enzyme species differed significantly with respect to their reactivity with dihydrouracil. Addition of dihydrouracil to the wild-type enzyme species, under anaerobic conditions, led to absorbance changes that could be interpreted to result from both partial flavin reduction and the formation of a complex between the enzyme and (dihydro)uracil. In contrast, only spectral changes consistent with formation of a complex between the oxidized enzyme and dihydrouracil were observed when a C671A mutant enzyme solution was titrated with this compound. Furthermore, enzyme-monitored turnover experiments were carried out anaerobically in the presence of a limiting amount of NADPH and excess uracil with the two enzyme forms in a stopped-flow apparatus. These experiments directly demonstrated that the substitution of an alanyl residue for C671 in dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase specifically prevents enzyme-catalyzed reduction of uracil. Finally, sequence analysis of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase revealed that it exhibits a modular structure; the N-terminal region, similar to the beta subunit of bacterial glutamate synthases, is proposed to be responsible for NADPH binding and oxidation with reduction of the FAD cofactor of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase. The central region, similar to the FMN subunit of dihydroorotate dehydrogenases, is likely to harbor the site o  相似文献   

14.
Recoverin is a small calcium binding protein involved in regulation of the phototransduction cascade in retinal rod cells. It functions as a calcium sensor by undergoing a cooperative, ligand-dependent conformational change, resulting in the extrusion of the N-terminal myristoyl group from a hydrophobic pocket. To test the role of certain core residues in tuning this allosteric switch, we have made and characterized two mutants: W31K, which replaces Trp31 with Lys; and a double mutant, I52A/Y53A, in which Ile52 and Tyr53 are both replaced by Ala. These mutations decrease the hydrophobicity of the myristoyl binding pocket. They are thus expected to make sequestering of the myristoyl group less favorable and destabilize the Ca2+-free state. As predicted, the myristoylated forms of the mutants exhibit increased affinity for Ca2+, whether monitored by equilibrium binding of 45Ca2+ (Kd = 17.2, 7.9, and 8.1 microM for wild type, W31K, and I52A/Y53A, respectively) or by the change in tryptophan fluorescence associated with the conformational change (Kd = 17.9, 3.6, and 4.4 microM for wild type, W31K, and I52A/Y53A, respectively). The mutants also exhibit decreased cooperativity of binding (Hill coefficient = 1.2 and 1.0 for W31K and I52A/Y53A vs 1. 4 for wild type). Binding of the mutant proteins to rod outer segment membranes occurs at lower Ca2+ concentrations compared to wild-type protein (K1/2 = 5.6, 2.2, and 1.0 microM for wild type, W31K, and I52A/Y53A, respectively). The unmyristoylated forms of the mutants exhibit biphasic Ca2+ binding curves, nearly identical to that observed for wild type. The binding data for the two mutants can be explained by a concerted allosteric model in which the mutations affect only the equilibrium constant L between the two allosteric forms, T (the Ca2+-free form) and R (the Ca2+-bound form), without affecting the intrinsic binding constants for the two Ca2+ sites. Two-dimensional NMR spectra of the Ca2+-free forms of the mutants have been compared to the wild-type spectrum, whose peaks have been assigned to specific residues (1). Many resonances assigned to residues in the C-terminal domain (residues 100-202) in the wild-type spectrum are identical in the mutant spectra, suggesting that the backbone structure of the C-terminal domain is probably unchanged in both mutants. The N-terminal domain, in which both mutations are located, reveals in each case numerous changes of undetermined spatial extent.  相似文献   

15.
Xanthine dehydrogenase, a molybdenum, iron-sulfur flavoenzyme encoded in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster by the rosy gene, has been characterised both from the wild-type and mutant files. Enzyme assays, using a variety of different oxidising and reducing substrates were supplemented by limited molecular characterisation. Four rosy strains showed no detectable activity in any enzyme assay tried, whereas from four wild-type and three rosy mutant strains, those for the [E89K], [L127F] and [L157P]xanthine dehydrogenases (in all of which the mutation is in the iron-sulfur domain), the enzyme molecules, although present at different levels, had extremely similar or identical properties. This was confirmed by purification of one wild-type and one mutant enzyme. [E89K]xanthine dehydrogenase. These both had ultraviolet-visible absorption spectra similar to milk xanthine oxidase. Both were found to be quite stable molecules, showing very high catalytic-centre activities and with little tendency to become degraded by proteolysis or modified by conversion to oxidase or desulfo forms. In three further rosy strains, giving [G353D]xanthine dehydrogenase and [S357F]xanthine dehydrogenase mutated in the flavin domain, and [G1011E]xanthine dehydrogenase mutated in the molybdenum domain, enzyme activities were selectively diminished in certain assays. For the G353D and S357F mutant enzymes activities to NAD+ as oxidising substrate were diminished, to zero for the latter. In addition for [G353D]xanthine dehydrogenase, there was an increase in apparent Km values both for NAD+ and NADH. These findings indicate involvement of this part of the sequence in the NAD(+)-binding site. The G1011E mutation has a profound effect on the enzyme. As isolated and as present in crude extracts of the files, this xanthine dehydrogenase variant lacks activity to xanthine or pterin as reducing substrate, indicating an impairment of the functioning of its molybdenum centre. However, it retains full activity to NADH with dyes as oxidising substrate. Mild oxidation of the enzyme converts it, apparently irreversibly, to a form showing full activity to xanthine and pterin. The nature of the group that is oxidised is discussed in the light of redox potential data. It is proposed that the process involves oxidation of the pterin of the molybdenum cofactor from the tetrahydro to a dihydro oxidation state. This conclusion is fully consistent with recent information [Rom?o, M. J., Archer, M., Moura, I., Moura. J.J.G., LeGall, J., Engh, R., Schneider, M., Hof, P. & Huber, R. (1995) Science 270. 1170-1176) from X-ray crystallography on the structure of a closely related enzyme from Desulfovibrio gigas. It is proposed, that apparent irreversibility of the oxidative activating process for [G1011E]xanthine dehydrogenase, is due to conversion of its pterin to the tricyclic derivative detected by these workers. The data thus provide the strongest evidence available, that the oxidation state of the pterin can have a controlling influence on the activity of a molybdenum cofactor enzyme. Implications regarding pterin incorporation into xanthine dehydrogenase and in relation to other molybdenum enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The importance of a cluster of conserved aromatic residues of human epidermal growth factor (hEGF) to the receptor binding epitope is suggested by the interaction of His10 and Tyr13 of the A-loop with Tyr22 and Tyr29 of the N-terminal beta-sheet to form a hydrophobic surface on the hEGF protein. Indeed, Tyr13 has previously been shown to contribute a hydrophobic determinant to receptor binding. The roles of His10, Tyr22 and Tyr29 were investigated by structure-function analysis of hEGF mutant analogues containing individual replacements of each residue. Substitutions with aromatic residues or a leucine at position 10 retained receptor affinities and agonist activities similar to wild-type indicating that an aromatic residue is not essential. Variants with polar, charged or aliphatic substitutions altered in size and/or hydrophobicity exhibited reduced binding and agonist activities. 1-Dimensional 1H NMR spectra of high, moderate and low-affinity analogues at position 10 suggested only minor alterations in hEGF native structure. In contrast, a variety of replacements were tolerated at position 22 or 29 indicating that neither aromaticity nor hydrophobicity of Tyr22 and Tyr29 is required for receptor binding. CD spectra of mutant analogues at position 22 or 29 indicated a correlation between loss of receptor affinity and alterations in hEGF structure. The results indicate that similar to Tyr13, His10 of hEGF contributes hydrophobicity to the receptor binding epitope, whereas Tyr22 and Tyr29 do not appear to be directly involved in receptor interactions. The latter conclusion, together with previous studies, suggests that hydrophobic residues on only one face of the N-terminal beta-sheet of hEGF are important in receptor recognition.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Mitochondrial processing peptidase, a metalloendopeptidase consisting of alpha- and beta-subunits, specifically recognizes a large variety of mitochondrial precursor proteins and cleaves off N-terminal extension peptides. The enzyme requires the basic amino acid residues in the extension peptides for effective and specific cleavage. To elucidate the mechanism involved in the molecular recognition of substrate by the enzyme, several glutamates around the active site of the rat beta-subunit, which has a putative metal-binding motif, H56XXEH60, were mutated to alanines or aspartates, and effects on kinetic parameters, metal binding, and substrate binding of the enzyme were analyzed. None of mutant proteins analyzed was impaired in dimer formation with the alpha-subunit. Mutation of glutamates at positions 79, 129, and 136, in addition to an active-site glutamate at position 59, resulted in a marked decrease in cleavage efficiency. Together with sequence alignment data, glutamate 136 appears to be involved in metal binding. Glutamate 129 is mostly responsible for the catalysis, as there was a considerable decrease in kcat value by the mutation. Mutation of glutamate 79 led to decrease in kcat value and increase in Km values. Substrate binding experiments using an environmentally sensitive fluorescence probe attached to the peptide showed that the mutation caused a remarkable environmental change at the binding site to the N-terminal region of the substrate peptide and decreased binding of the peptide, thereby suggesting that glutamate 79 participates primarily in substrate binding. Thus, some glutamate residues required for substrate binding and cleavage activity have been identified.  相似文献   

19.
Replacement of tyrosine 64 by alanine in cytochrome c553 from Desulfovibrio vulgarisHildenborough prevents electron transfer with the formate dehydrogenase. Biophysical and biochemical studies show that the protein is correctly folded and that the oxidoreduction potential is not modified. The solution structure of the mutant cytochrome determined by two-dimensional (2D) NMR clearly establishes that the overall fold of the molecule is nearly identical to that of the wild-type cytochrome. The electrostatic surface charge distributions for the wild-type and mutant cytochrome are similar, suggesting that the interaction site of the physiological partners is not modified by the mutation. The lack of the aromatic ring induces slight destabilization of the hydrophobic core of the molecule and modifications of the hydrogen bond at position 64, as well as conformational disorder of the side chain of K63. The loss of the hydrogen bond from tyrosine 64 and the increase of the solvent exposure of the heme are probably responsible of the loss of electron transfer between formate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c553.  相似文献   

20.
The recent structure determination of glutamate dehydrogenase from the hyperthermophile Pyrococcus furiosus and the comparison of this structure with its counterparts from the mesophiles Clostridium symbiosum and Escherichia coli has highlighted the formation of extended networks of ion-pairs as a possible explanation for the superior thermal stability of the hyperthermostable enzyme. In the light of this, we have carried out a homology-based modelling study using sequences of a range of glutamate dehydrogenases drawn from species which span a wide spectrum of optimal growth temperatures. We have attempted to analyse the extent of the formation of ion-pair networks in these different enzymes and tried to correlate this with the observed thermal stability. The results of this analysis indicate that the ion-pair networks become more fragmented as the temperature stability of the enzyme decreases and are consistent with a role for the involvement of such networks in the adaptation of enzymes to extreme temperatures.  相似文献   

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