PROTON-TRANSFER ROLES OF LYSINE-64 AND GLUTAMIC ACID-64 REPLACING HISTIDINE-64 IN THE ACTIVE-SITE OF HUMAN CARBONIC ANHYDRASE-II

被引:23
作者
ENGSTRAND, C [1 ]
FORSMAN, C [1 ]
LIANG, ZW [1 ]
LINDSKOG, S [1 ]
机构
[1] UMEA UNIV,AVDELNINGEN BIOKEMI,S-90187 UMEA,SWEDEN
关键词
CARBONIC ANHYDRASE; MUTAGENESIS; PROTON TRANSFER; ENZYME KINETICS; (HUMAN);
D O I
10.1016/0167-4838(92)90412-7
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The CO2 hydration activities of cloned human carbonic anhydrase II (carbonate hydro-lyase, EC 4.2.1.1) and variants with Lys, Glu, Gln or Ala replacing His at sequence position 64 have been measured in a variety of different buffers in the pH range 6-9. The variants with Lys-64, Gln-64 and Ala-64 showed non-Michaelis-Menten behavior under some conditions, apparent substrate inhibition being prominent near pH 9. However, asymptotic Michaelis-Menten parameters could be estimated for the limit of low substrate concentrations. All variants show distinct buffer specificities, and imidazole derivatives, Ches and phosphate buffers yield higher k(cat) values than Bicine, Taps and Mops buffers under otherwise similar conditions. These results are interpreted in terms of different pathways for a rate-limiting proton transfer. In unmodified enzyme, the verv high catalytic activity depends on His-64 functioning as an efficient proton transfer group, but this pathway is not available in the variants with Gln-64 and Ala-64. Imidazoles, Ches and phosphate are thought to participate in a metal center-to-buffer proton transfer pathway, whereas Bicine, Taps, Mops and Mes appear to lack this capacity, so that the rate-limiting proton transfer occurs in a metal center-to-bulk water pathway for these variants. The Lys-64 and Glu-64 variants give significantly higher k(cat) values in Taps, Mops and Mes buffers than the Ala-64 and Gln-64 variants. The pH dependencies of these k(cat) values are compatible with the hypothesis that Lys-64 and Glu-64 can function as proton transfer groups. Thus, at pH near 9, Lys-64 appears to be only 5-times less efficient than His-64, while Glu-64 is inefficient. At pH 6, Lys-64 is an inefficient proton transfer group, but Glu-64 is only 2-3-times less efficient than His-64. The data indicate that Lys-64 and Glu-64 have pK(a) values near 8 and below 6, respectively.
引用
收藏
页码:321 / 326
页数:6
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