On the role of the conserved aspartate in the hydrolysis of the phosphocysteine intermediate of the low molecular weight tyrosine phosphatase

被引:23
作者
Asthagiri, D
Liu, TQ
Noodleman, L
Van Etten, RL
Bashfordt, D
机构
[1] Scripps Res Inst, Dept Mol Biol, La Jolla, CA 92037 USA
[2] Purdue Univ, Dept Chem, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja048638o
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The usual rate-determining step in the catalytic mechanism of the low molecular weight tyrosine phosphatases involves the hydrolysis of a phosphocysteine intermediate. To explain this hydrolysis, general base-catalyzed attack of water by the anion of a conserved aspartic acid has sometimes been invoked. However, experimental measurements of solvent deuterium kinetic isotope effects for this enzyme do not reveal a rate-limiting proton transfer accompanying dephosphorylation. Moreover, base activation of water is difficult to reconcile with the known gas-phase proton affinities and solution phase pK(a)'s of aspartic acid and water. Alternatively, hydrolysis could proceed by a direct nucleophilic attack by a water molecule. To understand the hydrolysis mechanism, we have used high-level density functional methods of quantum chemistry combined with continuum electrostatics models of the protein and the solvent. Our calculations do not support a catalytic activation of water by the aspartate. Instead, they indicate that the water oxygen directly attacks the phosphorus, with the aspartate residue acting as a H-bond acceptor. In the transition state, the water protons are still bound to the oxygen. Beyond the transition state, the barrier to proton transfer to the base is greatly diminished; the aspartate can abstract a proton only after the transition state, a result consistent with experimental solvent isotope effects for this enzyme and with established precedents for phosphomonoester hydrolysis.
引用
收藏
页码:12677 / 12684
页数:8
相关论文
共 64 条
[1]  
*ADF, ADF 2 3 SCM THEOR CH
[2]   The substrate-assisted general base catalysis model for phosphate monoester hydrolysis: Evaluation using reactivity comparisons [J].
Admiraal, SJ ;
Herschlag, D .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2000, 122 (10) :2145-2148
[3]  
Alhambra C, 2000, J COMPUT CHEM, V21, P1192, DOI 10.1002/1096-987X(200010)21:13<1192::AID-JCC8>3.0.CO
[4]  
2-I
[5]   Density functional study of the mechanism of a tyrosine phosphatase: 1. Intermediate formation [J].
Asthagiri, D ;
Dillet, V ;
Liu, TQ ;
Noodleman, L ;
Van Etten, RL ;
Bashford, D .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2002, 124 (34) :10225-10235
[6]  
BARTMESS JE, 2001, NIST CHEM WEBBOOK
[7]   DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL EXCHANGE-ENERGY APPROXIMATION WITH CORRECT ASYMPTOTIC-BEHAVIOR [J].
BECKE, AD .
PHYSICAL REVIEW A, 1988, 38 (06) :3098-3100
[8]   CHARMM - A PROGRAM FOR MACROMOLECULAR ENERGY, MINIMIZATION, AND DYNAMICS CALCULATIONS [J].
BROOKS, BR ;
BRUCCOLERI, RE ;
OLAFSON, BD ;
STATES, DJ ;
SWAMINATHAN, S ;
KARPLUS, M .
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, 1983, 4 (02) :187-217
[9]   INCORPORATING SOLVATION EFFECTS INTO DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL ELECTRONIC-STRUCTURE CALCULATIONS [J].
CHEN, JL ;
NOODLEMAN, L ;
CASE, DA ;
BASHFORD, D .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, 1994, 98 (43) :11059-11068
[10]   A CATALYTIC MECHANISM FOR THE DUAL-SPECIFIC PHOSPHATASES [J].
DENU, JM ;
DIXON, JE .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1995, 92 (13) :5910-5914