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1.
Biochemistry ; 39(9): 2283-96, 2000 Mar 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10694395

RESUMO

The kinetics and mechanism of the citrate synthase from a moderate thermophile, Thermoplasma acidophilum (TpCS), are compared with those of the citrate synthase from a mesophile, pig heart (PCS). All discrete steps in the mechanistic sequence of PCS can be identified in TpCS. The catalytic strategies identified in PCS, destabilization of the oxaloacetate substrate carbonyl and stabilization of the reactive species, acetyl-CoA enolate, are present in TpCS. Conformational changes, which allow the enzyme to efficiently catalyze both condensation of acetyl-CoA thioester and subsequently hydrolysis of citryl-CoA thioester within the same active site, occur in both enzymes. However, significant differences exist between the two enzymes. PCS is a characteristically efficient enzyme: no internal step is clearly rate-limiting and the condensation step is readily reversible. TpCS is a less efficient catalyst. Over a broad temperature range, inadequate stabilization of the transition state for citryl-CoA hydrolysis renders this step nearly rate-limiting for the forward reaction of TpCS. Further, excessive stabilization of the citryl-CoA intermediate renders the condensation step nearly irreversible. Values of substrate and solvent deuterium isotope effects are consistent with the kinetic model. Near its temperature optimum (70 degrees C), there is a modest increase in the reversibility of the condensation step for TpCS, but reversibility still falls short of that shown by PCS at 37 degrees C. The root cause of the catalytic inefficiency of TpCS may lie in the lack of protein flexibility imposed by the requirement for thermal stability of the protein itself or its temperature-labile substrate, oxaloacetate.


Assuntos
Citrato (si)-Sintase/química , Thermoplasma/enzimologia , Acetilcoenzima A/química , Acil Coenzima A/química , Animais , Dicroísmo Circular , Citrato (si)-Sintase/antagonistas & inibidores , Citrato (si)-Sintase/genética , Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Ácido Cítrico/química , Coenzima A/química , Ativação Enzimática , Inibidores Enzimáticos/química , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Ponto Isoelétrico , Cinética , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Ácido Oxaloacético/química , Prótons , Solventes , Especificidade por Substrato , Suínos , Temperatura
2.
Biochemistry ; 37(27): 9724-37, 1998 Jul 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9657685

RESUMO

This work reports the relative importance of the interactions provided by three catalytic residues to individual steps in the mechanism of citrate synthase. When the side chains of any of the residues (H320, D375, and H274) are mutated, the data indicate that they are involved in the stabilization of one or more of the transition/intermediate states in the multistep citrate synthase reaction. H320 forms a hydrogen bond with the carbonyl of oxaloacetate and the alcohols of the citryl-coenzyme A and citrate products. Enzymes substituted at H320 (Q, G, N, and R) have reaction profiles for which the condensation reaction is cleanly rate determining. None of these mutants can activate the carbonyl of oxaloacetate by polarization. All these mutants catalyze the necessary proton transfer from the methyl group of acetyl-coenzyme A only poorly, a process which occurs in a structurally separate site. Furthermore, all H320 mutants hydrolyze the citryl-coenzyme A intermediate significantly more slowly than does the wild-type. D375 is the base removing the proton of acetyl-coenzyme A. D375E and D375G have greatly diminished ability to catalyze proton transfer from acetyl-CoA. The D375 mutants polarize the oxaloacetate carbonyl as well as wild-type. For D375E, the hydrolysis of citryl-CoA is rate determining. D375G, having no side chain capable of acid-base chemistry in either the condensation or hydrolysis reactions is nearly completely devoid of activity in any of the reactions catalyzed by the wild-type. H274 hydrogen bonds to the carbonyl of acetyl-coenzyme A but also forms the back wall of the oxaloacetate-binding site. H274G cannot properly activate either oxaloacetate or acetyl-coenzyme A, and the condensation reaction is overwhelmingly rate determining. Nonetheless, hydrolysis of the intermediate is impaired. All the enzymes except H320R and H274G show kinetic cooperativity with CitCoA as substrate, indicating changes in the subunit interactions with these latter two mutants. The energetics of citrate synthase are surprisingly tightly coupled. All changes affect more than one step in the catalytic cycle. Within the condensation reaction, the intermediate of proton transfer must occupy a shallow well between transition states close in free energy so that perturbations of one have substantial effects on that of the other.


Assuntos
Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Acil Coenzima A/metabolismo , Substituição de Aminoácidos/genética , Animais , Arginina/genética , Asparagina/genética , Sítios de Ligação/genética , Catálise , Dicroísmo Circular , Citrato (si)-Sintase/antagonistas & inibidores , Citrato (si)-Sintase/genética , Ácido Cítrico/metabolismo , Estabilidade Enzimática/genética , Glutamina/genética , Glicina/genética , Histidina/genética , Hidrólise , Cinética , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Oxaloacetatos/metabolismo , Prótons , Solventes , Especificidade por Substrato , Suínos
3.
Biochemistry ; 37(14): 4968-76, 1998 Apr 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9538015

RESUMO

The Raman spectra of purine ribonucleoside as well as a stable model compound (1-methoxyl-1,6-dihydropurine ribonucleoside), free in solution and bound into its complex with adenosine deaminase (ADA), have been studied by Raman difference spectroscopy. Using purine riboside analogues labeled with 15N1 or 13C6 and the theoretical frequency normal-mode analyses of these molecules using ab initio quantum mechanic methods, we have positively identified many of the Raman bands in the enzyme-bound inhibitor. The spectrum of the enzyme-bound inhibitor is consistent with the enzyme-catalyzed hydration of the purine base to yield 1-hydroxyl-1,6-dihydropurine ribonucleoside, as suggested earlier by X-ray crystallographic studies. In addition, the Raman data and subsequent vibrational analyses show that the binding-induced Raman spectral changes of the inhibitor can be modeled by the formation of a strong hydrogen bond to its N1-H bond. This hydrogen bond, apparently between the N1-H of the inhibitor and the Odelta1 of Glu217 in ADA, causes a substantial N1-H bending frequency increase of about 50-100 cm-1 compared to its solution value, and this results in an estimated enthalpy of the hydrogen bond of 4-10 kcal/mol. The relationship of transition state stabilization in the catalytic strategy of this efficient enzyme to such a bonding pattern is discussed.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/química , Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Animais , Catálise , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Camundongos , Nucleosídeos de Purina/química , Ribonucleosídeos/química , Análise Espectral Raman
4.
Biochemistry ; 36(13): 3981-90, 1997 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9092828

RESUMO

The catalytic strategies of enzymes (such as citrate synthase) whose reactions require the abstraction of the alpha-proton of a carbon acid remain elusive. Citrate synthase readily catalyzes solvent proton exchange of the methyl protons of dethiaacetyl-coenzyme A, a sulfur-less, ketone analog of acetyl-coenzyme A, in its ternary complex with oxaloacetate. Because no further reaction occurs with this analog, it provides a uniquely simple probe of the roles of active site interactions on carbon acid proton transfer catalysis. In view of the high reactivity of the analog for proton transfer to the active site base, its failure to further condense with oxaloacetate to form a sulfur-less analog of citryl-coenzyme A was unexpected, although we offer several possible explanations. We have measured the rate constants for exchange, k(exch), at saturating concentrations of the analog for six citrate synthase mutants with single changes in active site residues. Comparisons between the values of k(exch) are straightforward in two limits. If the rate of exchange of the transferred proton with solvent protons is rapid, then k(exch) equals the forward rate constant for proton transfer, and k(exch) values for different mutants compare directly the rate constants for proton transfer. If the exchange of the transferred proton with protons in the bulk solution is the slow step and the equilibrium constant for proton transfer is unfavorable (as is likely), then k(exch) equals the product of the equilibrium constant for proton transfer and the rate constant for exchange of the transferred proton with bulk solvent. If that exchange rate with bulk solution remains constant for a series of mutant enzymes, then k(exch) values compare the equilibrium constants for proton transfer. The importance of the acetyl-CoA site residues, H274 and D375, is confirmed with D375 again implicated as the active site base. The results with the series of oxaloacetate site mutants, H320X, strongly suggest that activation of the first substrate, oxaloacetate, through carbonyl bond polarization, not just oxaloacetate binding in the active site, is required for the enzyme to efficiently catalyze proton transfer from the methyl group of the second substrate.


Assuntos
Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Acetilcoenzima A/química , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Dicroísmo Circular , Citrato (si)-Sintase/genética , Clonagem Molecular , Primers do DNA/química , Escherichia coli/genética , Expressão Gênica/genética , Cinética , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Estrutura Molecular , Mutação , Miocárdio/enzimologia , Oxaloacetatos/metabolismo , Prótons , Suínos
5.
Biochemistry ; 35(47): 15019-28, 1996 Nov 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8942668

RESUMO

His 238, a conserved amino acid located in hydrogen-bonding distance from C-6 of the substrate in the active site of murine adenosine deaminase (mADA) and postulated to play an important role in catalysis, was altered into an alanine, a glutamate, and an arginine using site-directed mutagenesis. The Ala and Glu substitutions did not result in changes of the secondary or tertiary structure, while the Arg mutation caused local perturbations in tertiary structure and quenched the emission of one or more enzyme tryptophans. Neither the Glu or Arg mutations affected substrate binding affinity. By contrast, the Ala mutation enhanced substrate and inhibitor binding by 20-fold. The most inactive of the mutants, Glu 238, had a kcat/K(m) 4 x 10(-6) lower than the wild-type value, suggesting that a positive charge on His 238 is important for proper catalytic function. The Ala 238 mutant was the most active ADA, with a kcat/K(m) 2 x 10(-3) lower than the wild-type value. NMR spectroscopy and crystallography revealed that this mutant is able to catalyze hydration of purine riboside, a ground-state analog of the reaction. These results collectively show that His 238 is not required for formation of the hydroxylate used in the deamination and may instead have an important electrostatic role.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Histidina/metabolismo , Adenosina Desaminase/química , Adenosina Desaminase/genética , Adenosina Desaminase/isolamento & purificação , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Catálise , Dicroísmo Circular , Cristalografia por Raios X , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Camundongos , Modelos Moleculares , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Purinas/metabolismo , Análise Espectral/métodos , Especificidade por Substrato
6.
Biochemistry ; 35(33): 10661-72, 1996 Aug 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8718855

RESUMO

We examined the catalytic efficiency of 18 pig citrate synthase mutants. The residues mutated were selected according to two criteria: the conservation of that residue in all known citrate synthase sequences, and the importance of that residue in substrate-amino acid interactions suggested by the extensive crystal structure information on the enzyme and its complexes. Several changes were made at certain residues to probe the effects of size, hydrogen bonding, and charge on the kinetics of the enzyme. The mutations, as expected, affected the kcats and Kms for OAA and acetyl-CoA to varying degrees. The catalytic efficiency of each of the mutants was determined by the kcat/Km for the individual substrates, OAA and acetyl-CoA. All mutations affected kcat. There was only one mutant, Asp327 Asn, in which the Kms primarily were affected. Most mutations affected both kcat and Km and included the following: His274Gly, His274Arg, Asp375Gly, Asp375Asn, Asp375Glu, Asp375Gln, His320Gly, His320Gln, His320Asn, His320Arg, Arg401His, Gly275Val, and Gly275Ala. The mutations, Arg401Gly, Arg401Lys, His235Gln, and Asn242Glu, had smaller effects on kcat and Km. The CS mutant Arg401Lys exhibited a modestly improved kcat/Km for both substrates compared to the nonmutant enzyme. X-ray crystallographic studies at 2.7 A resolution of one of the mutants, His274Gly, have been undertaken. The mutant enzyme crystallizes in an "open" conformation essentially isomorphous to wild type. The refined model has good geometry and a crystallographic R factor of 0.187 for 11 441 reflections observed between 6.0 and 2.7 A resolution. The refined model revealed a localized relaxation of the structure to relieve strain imposed by a high-energy main and side chain conformation of His274 in the nonmutant, but otherwise the mutation does not result in major structural alterations. Preliminary electrostatic calculations provide support for the concept that the transition state in the rate-limiting step of the citrate synthase catalyzed reaction may be an "enolized" version of acetyl-CoA that is neither neutral nor fully negatively charged and that a possible role for the catalytically essential His274 is to stabilize this by charge delocalization mediated by a hydrogen bond. These results provide the basis for further studies of the effects of these changes on the several reactive intermediates, activated substrates, and transition states which may occur along the reaction coordinate for this type of Claisen enzyme.


Assuntos
Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Sítios de Ligação , Catálise , Citrato (si)-Sintase/química , Citrato (si)-Sintase/genética , Citrato (si)-Sintase/isolamento & purificação , DNA Complementar , Eletroquímica , Cinética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Conformação Proteica , Suínos , Termodinâmica
7.
Biochemistry ; 35(5): 1672-80, 1996 Feb 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8634299

RESUMO

Mouse adenosine deaminase (ADA) contains an active site glutamate residue at position-217 that is highly conserved in other adenosine and AMP deaminases. Previous research has suggested that proton donation to N-1 of the adenosine ring occurs prior to catalysis and supports the mechanism as proceeding via formation of a tetrahedral intermediate at C-6 of adenosine. The proposed catalytic mechanism of ADA based on the recent elucidations of the crystal structure of this enzyme with transition- and ground-state analogs hypothesized that Glu217 was involved in this proton donation step [Wilson, D. K., Rudolph, F. B., & Quiocho, F. A. (1991) Science 252, 1278-1284; Wilson, D. K., & Quiocho, F. A. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 1689-1693]. Site-directed mutagenesis of the equivalent glutamate in human ADA resulted in a dramatic loss of enzyme activity [Bhaumik, D., Medin, J., Gathy, K., & Coleman, M. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 5464-5470]. To further study the importance of this residue, site-directed mutagenesis was used to create mouse ADA mutants. Glu217 was mutated to Asp, Gly, Gln, and Ser, and all mutants were successfully expressed and purified. Circular dichroism and zinc analysis showed no significant changes in secondary structure or zinc content, respectively, compared to the native protein. The mutants showed only a slight variation in Km but dramatically reduced kcat, less than 0.2% of wild-type activity. UV difference and 13C NMR spectra conclusively demonstrated the failure of any of these mutants to hydrate purine riboside, a reaction carried out by the wild-type enzyme that results in formation of an enzyme-inhibitor complex. Surprisingly, Ki values for binding of the inhibitor to the mutants and to wild-type protein are similar, irrespective of whether the inhibitor is hydrated upon binding. These data confirm the importance of Glu217 in catalysis as suggested by the crystal structure of mouse ADA.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Metaloproteínas/metabolismo , Zinco , Adenosina Desaminase/genética , Inibidores de Adenosina Desaminase , Animais , Sítios de Ligação/genética , Catálise , Dicroísmo Circular , Inibidores Enzimáticos/metabolismo , Ácido Glutâmico/genética , Cinética , Metaloproteínas/genética , Camundongos , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína , Nucleosídeos de Purina/metabolismo , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Ribonucleosídeos/metabolismo
8.
Biochemistry ; 34(41): 13278-88, 1995 Oct 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7577912

RESUMO

The active site of pig heart citrate synthase contains a histidine residue (H320) which interacts with the carbonyl oxygen of oxaloacetate and is implicated in substrate activation through carbonyl bond polarization, a major catalytic strategy of the enzyme. We report here the effects on the catalytic mechanism of changing this important residue to glycine. H320G shows modest impairment in substrate Michaelis constants [(7-16)-fold] and a large decrease in catalysis (600-fold). For the native enzyme, the chemical intermediate, citryl-CoA, is both hydrolyzed and converted back to reactants, oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA. In the mutant, citryl-CoA is only hydrolyzed, indicating a major defect in the condensation reaction. As monitored by the carbonyl carbon's chemical shift, the extent of oxaloacetate carbonyl polarization is decreased in all binary and ternary complexes. As indicated by the lack of rapid H320G--oxaloacetate catalysis of the exchange of the methyl protons of acetyl-CoA or the pro-S-methylene proton of propionyl-CoA, the activation of acetyl-CoA is also faulty. Reflecting this defect in acetyl-CoA activation, the carboxyl chemical shift of H320G-bound carboxymethyl-CoA (a transition-state analog of the neutral enol intermediate) fails to decrease on formation of the H3020G-oxaloacetate-carboxymethyl-CoA ternary complex. Progress curves and steady-state data with H320G using citryl-CoA as substrate show unusual properties: substrate inhibition and accelerating progress curves. Either one of two models with subunit cooperativity [Monod, J., Wyman, J., & Changeux, J.-P. (1965) J. Mol. Biol. 12, 88; Koshland, D. E., Jr., Nemethy, G., & Filmer, D. (1966) Biochemistry 5, 365] quantitatively accounts for both the initial velocity data and the individual progress curves. The concentrations of all enzyme forms and complexes are assumed to rapidly reach their equilibrium values compared to the rate of substrate turnover. The native enzyme also behaves according to models for subunit cooperativity with citryl-CoA as substrate. However, the rates of formation/dissociation and reaction of complexes are kinetically significant. Comparisons of the values of kinetic constants between the native and mutants enzymes lead us to conclude that the mutant less readily undergoes a conformation change required for efficient activation of substrates.


Assuntos
Citrato (si)-Sintase/química , Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Histidina , Oxaloacetatos/metabolismo , Conformação Proteica , Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Acil Coenzima A/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Catálise , Dicroísmo Circular , Cinética , Substâncias Macromoleculares , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Matemática , Modelos Teóricos , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Miocárdio/enzimologia , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Suínos
9.
Biochemistry ; 31(34): 7899-907, 1992 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1324722

RESUMO

Citrate synthase complexes with the transition-state analog inhibitor, carboxymethyl-CoA (CM-CoA), are believed to mimic those with the activated form of acetyl-CoA. The X-ray structure [Karpusas, M., Branchaud, B., & Remington, S.J. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2213] of the ternary complex of the enzyme, oxaloacetate, and CMCoA has been used as the basis for a proposal that a neutral enol of acetyl-CoA is that activated form. Since the inhibitor carboxyl has a pKa of 3.90, analogy with an enolic acetyl-CoA intermediate leads to the prediction that a proton should be taken up from solution upon formation of the analog complex so that the transition-state analog carboxyl is protonated when bound. We have obtained evidence in solution for this proposal by comparing the isoelectric points and the pH dependence of the dissociation constants of the ternary complexes of the pig heart enzyme with the neutral ground-state analog inhibitor, acetonyl-CoA (KCoA), and the anionic transition-state analog inhibitor (CMCoA) and by studying the NMR spectra of the transition-state analog complexes of allosteric (Escherichia coli) and nonallosteric (pig heart) enzymes. The pH dependence of the dissociation constant of the ground-state analog indicates no proton uptake, while that for the transition-state analog indicates that 0.55 +/- 0.04 proton is taken up when the analog binds to the citrate synthase-oxaloacetate binary complex. The overall charges of ternary complexes of the pig heart enzyme with the transition-state and ground-state analog inhibitors are the same, as monitored by their isoelectric points.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Assuntos
Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Acil Coenzima A/metabolismo , Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Oxaloacetatos/metabolismo , Prótons , Regulação Alostérica , Animais , Dicroísmo Circular , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Ponto Isoelétrico , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Miocárdio/enzimologia , Cloreto de Potássio/farmacologia , Suínos
10.
Biochemistry ; 31(34): 7908-14, 1992 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1324723

RESUMO

Acetyl-CoA enol has been proposed as an intermediate in the citrate synthase (CS) reaction with Asp375 acting as a base, removing a proton from the methyl carbon of acetyl-CoA, and His274 acting as an acid, donating a proton to the carbonyl [Karpusas, M., Branchaud, B., & Remington, S.J. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2213]. CS-oxaloacetate (OAA) complexes with the transition-state analog inhibitor, carboxymethyl-CoA (CMCoA), mimic those with acetyl-CoA enol. Asp375 and His274 interact intimately with the carboxyl of the bound inhibitor. While enzymes in which these residues have been changed to other amino acids have very low catalytic activity, we find that they retain their ability to form complexes with substrates and the transition-state analog inhibitor. In comparison with the value of the chemical shift of the protonated CMCoA carboxyl in acidic aqueous solutions or its value in the wild-type ternary complex, the values in the Asp375 mutants are unusually low. Model studies suggest that these low values result from complete absence of one hydrogen bond partner for the Gly mutant and distortions in the active site hydrogen bond systems for the Glu mutant. The high affinity of Asp375Gly-OAA for CMCoA suggests that the unfavorable proton uptake required to stabilize the CMCoA-OAA ternary complex of the wild-type enzyme [Kurz, L.C., Shah, S., Crane, B.R., Donald, L.J., Duckworth, H.W., & Drysdale, G.R. (1992) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)] is not required by this mutant; the needed proton is most likely provided by His274. This supports the proposed role of His274 as a general acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Assuntos
Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Acil Coenzima A/metabolismo , Animais , Ácido Aspártico , Sítios de Ligação , Catálise , Citrato (si)-Sintase/química , Glicina , Histidina , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Focalização Isoelétrica , Ponto Isoelétrico , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Mutagênese , Miocárdio/enzimologia , Oxaloacetatos/metabolismo , Prótons , Suínos
11.
Biochemistry ; 31(1): 39-48, 1992 Jan 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1731884

RESUMO

We have previously shown that purine riboside, when bound to adenosine deaminase, forms a complex in which C-6 of the purine is tetrahedral [Kurz, L. C., & Frieden, C. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 8450]. We now report the rates of formation of enzyme-inhibitor complexes of two types, those which do and those which do not form such tetrahedral intermediates. In both cases, the rates are encounter-controlled since the progress curves for formation of the complexes are well-described by a simple second-order approach to equilibrium and the rate constants show an inverse solvent viscosity dependence. Assuming that the formation of the intermediate-analogue complex is preceded by an initial ground-state analogue complex, the lifetime of that ground-state complex must be less than approximately 20 microseconds. All of the enzyme-inhibitor complexes studied share three characteristics: (1) the complexes generate large UV-difference spectra; (2) a substantial solvent isotope effect is found on the enzyme's affinity for the inhibitors; and (3) a new signal appears in the CD spectra of the complexes. Two of the nucleosides studied, 1-deazapurine riboside and 1-deaza-adenosine, form complexes which appear to mimic a ground-state rather than a reactive intermediate when bound to adenosine deaminase. We find that the values for the association rate constants for those inhibitors which form intermediate analogues are very similar to that for adenosine. The presence of a significant solvent isotope effect on the affinity of all inhibitors is attributable in part to a large transfer isotope effect on the free ligand and in part to an effect on the bound ligand. This complicates use of the solvent isotope effect in applications of the multiple isotope method for estimating intrinsic isotope effects and commitment factors.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Nucleosídeos de Purina/farmacologia , Ribonucleosídeos/farmacologia , Adenosina/análogos & derivados , Adenosina/farmacologia , Inibidores de Adenosina Desaminase , Animais , Sítios de Ligação/efeitos dos fármacos , Catálise , Bovinos , Dicroísmo Circular , Intestinos/enzimologia , Nucleosídeos de Purina/metabolismo , Ribonucleosídeos/metabolismo , Solventes , Espectrofotometria Ultravioleta , Tubercidina/farmacologia
12.
Biochemistry ; 28(3): 1242-7, 1989 Feb 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2713361

RESUMO

Positions of equilibria of highly unfavorable addition reactions, whose products are present at concentrations below the limits of detection, can be determined from equilibria of combination of anionic nucleophiles with quaternized enamines. Applied to the newly prepared 1-methylpurinium ribonucleoside cation, this method yields approximate equilibrium constants of 2 X 10(-9) M-1 for addition of water and 4 X 10(-5) M-1 for addition of N-acetylcysteine to neutral purine ribonucleoside, in dilute aqueous solution. Positions of 13C magnetic resonances and UV absorption maxima of the above complexes and comparison with those of adenosine deaminase complexes strongly suggest that purine ribonucleoside is bound by adenosine deaminase as the 1,6 covalent hydrate, not as a covalently bonded complex formed by addition of a thiol group at the active site. The favorable position of equilibrium of the hydration reaction on the enzyme, together with its extremely unfavorable position in free solution, indicates that the effective activity of substrate water at the active site is in the neighborhood of 10(10) M. The Ki value of the active diastereomer of 6-hydroxy-1,6-dihydropurine ribonucleoside is estimated as 1.6 X 10(-13) M, more than 8 orders of magnitude lower than the apparent dissociation constants of enzyme complexes with the substrate adenosine or the product inosine. The enzyme's remarkable affinity for this hydrated species, which is vanishingly rare in free solution, seems understandable in terms of the hydrate's close resemblance to a hydrated intermediate approaching the transition state in direct water attack on adenosine.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Nucleosídeo Desaminases/metabolismo , Nucleosídeos de Purina/metabolismo , Ribonucleosídeos/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Estabilidade Enzimática , Cinética , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Espectrofotometria Ultravioleta , Água
13.
Biochemistry ; 26(25): 8450-7, 1987 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3442668

RESUMO

The 13C NMR spectra of [2-13C]- and [6-13C]purine ribosides have been obtained free in solution and bound to the active site of adenosine deaminase. The positions of the resonances of the bound ligand are shifted relative to those of the free ligand as follows: C-2, -3.7 ppm; C-6, -73.1 ppm. The binary complexes are in slow exchange with free purine riboside on the NMR time scale, and the dissociation rate constant is estimated to be 13.5 s-1 from the slow exchange broadening of the free signal. In aqueous solution, protonation of purine riboside at N-1 results in changes in 13C chemical shift relative to those of the free base as follows: C-2, -4.9 ppm; C-6, -7.9 ppm. The changes in chemical shift that occur when purine riboside binds to the enzyme indicate that the hybridization of C-6 changes from sp2 to sp3 in the binary complex with formation of a new bond to oxygen or sulfur. A change in C-2 hybridization can be eliminated as can protonation at N-1 as the sole cause of the chemical shift changes. The kinetic constants for the adenosine deaminase catalyzed hydrolysis of 6-chloro- and 6-fluoropurine riboside have been compared, and the reactivity order implies that carbon-halogen bond breaking does not occur in the rate-determining step. These observations support a mechanism for the enzyme in which formation of a tetrahedral intermediate is the most difficult chemical step. Enzymic stabilization of this intermediate may be an important catalytic strategy used by the enzyme to lower the standard free energy of the preceding transition state.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Nucleosídeo Desaminases/metabolismo , Nucleosídeos de Purina/metabolismo , Isótopos de Carbono , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Indicadores e Reagentes , Cinética , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Nucleosídeos de Purina/síntese química , Relação Estrutura-Atividade
14.
Biochemistry ; 26(11): 3027-32, 1987 Jun 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3607008

RESUMO

We have studied the effects of viscosogenic agents, sucrose and ficoll, on (1) the hydrolysis of adenosine and of 6-methoxypurine riboside catalyzed by adenosine deaminase and (2) the rates of association and dissociation of ground-state and transition-state analogue inhibitors. For adenosine, Vmax/Km is found to be inversely proportional to the relative viscosity with sucrose, an agent affecting the microscopic viscosity, while no effect is found with ficoll, an agent affecting the macroscopic viscosity. Viscosogenic agents have no effect on the kinetic constants for 6-methoxypurine riboside. Thus, the bimolecular rate constant, Vmax/Km = 11.2 +/- 0.8 microM-1 s-1, for the reaction with adenosine is found to be at the encounter-controlled limit while that for the reaction with the poor substrate 6-methoxypurine riboside, 0.040 +/- 0.004 microM-1 s-1, is limited by some other process. Viscosity-dependent processes do not make a significant (less than 10%) contribution to Vmax. The dissociation constants for inhibitors are unaffected by viscosity. The ground-state analogue inhibitor purine riboside appears to bind at a rate comparable to that of adenosine. However, the slower rates of association (0.16-2.5 microM-1 s-1) and dissociation (5 X 10(-6) to 12 s-1) of transition-state analogue inhibitors are affected by the viscosity of the medium to approximately the same extent as the encounter-controlled rates of association and dissociation of adenosine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/metabolismo , Nucleosídeo Desaminases/metabolismo , Inibidores de Adenosina Desaminase , Sítios de Ligação , Cinética , Matemática , Ligação Proteica , Viscosidade
15.
Biochemistry ; 26(9): 2623-7, 1987 May 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3607038

RESUMO

The infrared spectrum of oxaloacetate bound in the active site of citrate synthase has been measured in the binary complex and in the ternary complex with the acetyl coenzyme A (CoA) enolate analogue carboxymethyl-CoA. The carbonyl stretching frequency of oxaloacetate in binary and ternary complexes is found at 1697 cm-1, a shift of 21 cm-1 to lower frequency relative to that of the free ligand. The line widths of the carbonyl absorption in enzyme complexes differ from that of the free ligand, decreasing from a value of 20 cm-1 for the free ligand to 10 cm-1 in the binary complex and 7 cm-1 in the ternary complex with carboxymethyl-CoA. The integrated absorbance of the carbonyl absorption in these enzyme complexes is significantly increased over that of the free ligand at the same concentration, increasing approximately 2-fold in the binary complex and approximately 3-fold in the ternary complex. These results indicate strong polarization of the carbonyl bond in the enzyme-substrate complexes and suggest that ground-state destabilization is a major catalytic strategy of citrate synthase.


Assuntos
Citrato (si)-Sintase/metabolismo , Oxaloacetatos/metabolismo , Oxo-Ácido-Liases/metabolismo , Acetilcoenzima A/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Análise de Fourier , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Ligação Proteica , Espectrofotometria Infravermelho
16.
Biochemistry ; 24(6): 1342-6, 1985 Mar 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3986181

RESUMO

The accessibility of protein tryptophan fluorescence to the quenching agent acrylamide has been studied in adenosine deaminase and in binary complexes of the enzyme with ground-state or transition-state analogues. Although the enzyme contains three tryptophan residues, Stern-Volmer plots are linear with all the fluorescence quenchable at high acrylamide concentrations. Tryptophan fluorescence is less easily quenched in the binary complexes than in the free enzyme, indicating a decrease in the accessibility of these residues. The greatest decrease in accessibility is found for the transition-state analogue complexes. Although the affinities of the transition-state analogues studied span a range of 10(6), the Stern-Volmer constants of the complexes are the same within experimental error. Thus, as measured by this technique, changes in enzyme conformation accompanying formation of these complexes are similar for all transition-state analogues. Resonance energy transfer from tryptophan as donor to ligand as acceptor successfully explains the differing abilities of ligands to quench the enzyme's intrinsic fluorescence upon formation of complexes in the absence of acrylamide. On the basis of Forster distance calculations, it is likely that the residues partially quenched upon formation of transition-state analogue complexes are distant from the active site.


Assuntos
Adenosina Desaminase/análise , Nucleosídeo Desaminases/análise , Triptofano , Animais , Bovinos , Fenômenos Químicos , Físico-Química , Fluorescência , Matemática , Espectrofotometria
17.
Biochemistry ; 24(2): 452-7, 1985 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3978085

RESUMO

The carbon-13 NMR spectrum of oxaloacetate bound in the active site of citrate synthase has been obtained at 90.56 MHz. In the binary complex with enzyme, the positions of the resonances of oxaloacetate are shifted relative to those of the free ligand as follows: C-1 (carboxylate), -2.5 ppm; C-2 (carbonyl), +4.3 ppm; C-3 (methylene), -0.6 ppm; C-4 (carboxylate), +1.3 ppm. The change observed in the carbonyl chemical shift is successively increased in ternary complexes with the product [coenzyme A (CoA)], a substrate analogue (S-acetonyl-CoA), and an acetyl-CoA enolate analogue (carboxymethyl-CoA), reaching a value of +6.8 ppm from the free carbonyl resonance. Binary complexes are in intermediate to fast exchange on the NMR time scale with free oxaloacetate; ternary complexes are in slow exchange. Line widths of the methylene resonance in the ternary complexes suggest complete immobilization of oxaloacetate in the active site. Analysis of line widths in the binary complex suggests the existence of a dynamic equilibrium between two or more forms of bound oxaloacetate, primarily involving C-4. The changes in chemical shifts of the carbonyl carbon indicate strong polarization of the carbonyl bond or protonation of the carbonyl oxygen. Some of this carbonyl polarization occurs even in the binary complex. Development of positive charge on the carbonyl carbon enhances reactivity toward condensation with the carbanion/enolate of acetyl-CoA in the mechanism which has been postulated for this enzyme. The very large change in the chemical shift of the reacting carbonyl in the presence of an analogue of the enolate of acetyl-CoA supports this interpretation.


Assuntos
Citrato (si)-Sintase , Oxaloacetatos , Oxo-Ácido-Liases , Sítios de Ligação , Catálise , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Conformação Molecular , Ligação Proteica
20.
Eur J Biochem ; 90(2): 283-5, 1978 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-213274

RESUMO

For reductions by dihydropyridines, the slopes of plots of log k vs the standard reduction potential of the dihydropyridine are not direct indicators of whether the rate-determining step is hydride-ion or hydrogen-atom transfer. When there is no substituent effect on the reverse rate, those slopes are independent of mechanism and equal to about (30mV)-1.


Assuntos
NAD , Transporte de Elétrons , Transferência de Energia , Hidrogênio , Cinética , Matemática , Oxirredução , Termodinâmica
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