MECHANISM OF THE REACTION CATALYZED BY DELTA(5)-3-KETOSTEROID ISOMERASE OF COMAMONAS (PSEUDOMONAS) TESTOSTERONI - KINETIC-PROPERTIES OF A MODIFIED ENZYME IN WHICH TYROSINE-14 IS REPLACED BY 3-FLUOROTYROSINE
Tyrosine 14 of Delta(5)-3-ketosteroid isomerase plays an important role in the function of the enzyme, since its replacement by phenylalanine results in a decrease in k(cat) by a factor of 10(-4.7). This result and the fact that this residue resides in the enzyme's substrate binding site and is in close proximity to C-2 of the bound steroid suggests that it functions as an electrophile in the catalytic mechanism by protonation of or hydrogen bonding to the C-3 carbonyl oxygen of the substrate. In order to obtain more information about the role of tyrosine 14, we have prepared a modified form of the enzyme in which tyrosine 14 has been substantially replaced in vivo by exogenously supplied 3-fluorotyrosine, a tyrosine derivative in which the pK(a)' of the phenol hydroxyl should be decreased by about 1.5 log units. Site specificity of this modification has been ensured by mutation of the codons for the nonessential tyrosines 55 and 88 to phenylalanine. We find that replacement of tyrosine 14 by 3-fluorotyrosine in the Y55,88F modified form of the isomerase results in a 4-fold decrease in k(cat). We interpret this result in terms of a mechanism in which the transition state for enolization is dienolate-like, characterized by relatively little proton transfer from tyrosine 14 in the transition state, and the intermediate in the overall reaction is dienol-like. An alternative mechanism in which the intermediate is stabilized by a short, strong hydrogen bond can also be consistent with the data.