scholarly journals Alkylation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase with haloacetylphosphonates. An unusual pH-dependence

1991 ◽  
Vol 275 (3) ◽  
pp. 767-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y K Li ◽  
J Boggaram ◽  
L D Byers

Two new alkylating reagents, chloro- and bromo-acetylphosphonate, were found to be very effective thiol-blocking reagents. The pH-dependence of the reaction of BAP with 2,4-dinitrothiophenol (25 degrees C, I 0.5) shows a tailing bell-shaped curve (with a plateau at high pH) characteristic of two ionizing groups: the thiol group (pKa 3.2) and the phosphonate group (pKa2 4.6). The rate constant for the reaction of the monoanionic inhibitor with dinitrothiophenolate (k2 = 7 M-1.s-1) is 120 times larger than that of the dianionic species. The haloacetylphosphonates were found to be irreversible inhibitors of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from a variety of sources. They react with the active-site thiol group (Cys-149) and are half-site reagents with yeast glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Thus, when two of the identical four subunits are modified the enzyme is catalytically inactive. The effects of pH (7-10), 2H2O and NAD+ on the reaction with the yeast enzyme were examined in detail. NAD+ enhances the alkylation rates. The second-order rate constant does not show a simple sigmoidal dependence on pH but rather a tailing bell-shaped curve (pKa 7.0 and 8.4) qualitatively similar to that obtained with dinitrothiophenol. There is no significant solvent isotope effect on the limiting rate constants and a normal isotope effect on the two pKa values. The results are consistent with the more reactive enzyme species containing a thiolate and an acidic group that may either donate a proton to the dianionic haloacetylphosphonate or orient the inhibitor.

1991 ◽  
Vol 275 (2) ◽  
pp. 335-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
H C Hawkins ◽  
R B Freedman

1. The number of reactive thiol groups in mammalian liver protein disulphide-isomerase (PDI) in various conditions was investigated by alkylation with iodo[14C]acetate. 2. Both the native enzyme, as isolated, and the urea-denatured enzyme contained negligible reactive thiol groups; the enzyme reduced with dithiothreitol contained two groups reactive towards iodoacetic acid at pH 7.5, and up to five reactive groups were detectable in the reduced denatured enzyme. 3. Modification of the two reactive groups in the reduced native enzyme led to complete inactivation, and the relationship between the loss of activity and the extent of modification was approximately linear. 4. Inactivation of PDI by alkylation of the reduced enzyme followed pseudo-first-order kinetics; a plot of the pH-dependence of the second-order rate constant for inactivation indicated that the essential reactive groups had a pK of 6.7 and a limiting second-order rate constant at high pH of 11 M-1.s-1. 5. Since sequence data on PDI show the presence within the polypeptide of two regions closely similar to thioredoxin, the data strongly indicate that these regions are chemically and functionally equivalent to thioredoxin. 6. The activity of PDI in thiol/disulphide interchange derives from the presence of vicinal dithiol groups in which one thiol group of each pair has an unusually low pK and high nucleophilic reactivity at physiological pH.


1992 ◽  
Vol 45 (12) ◽  
pp. 1943 ◽  
Author(s):  
SJ Dunne ◽  
RC Burns ◽  
GA Lawrance

Oxidation of Ni2+,aq, by S2O82- to nickel(IV) in the presence of molybdate ion, as in the analogous manganese system, involves the formation of the soluble heteropolymolybdate anion [MMogO32]2- (M = Ni, Mn ). The nickel(IV) product crystallized as (NH4)6 [NiMogO32].6H2O from the reaction mixture in the rhombohedra1 space group R3, a 15.922(1), c 12.406(1) � ; the structure was determined by X-ray diffraction methods, and refined to a residual of 0.025 for 1741 independent 'observed' reflections. The kinetics of the oxidation were examined at 80 C over the pH range 3.0-5.2; a linear dependence on [S2O82-] and a non-linear dependence on l/[H+] were observed. The influence of variation of the Ni/Mo ratio between 1:10 and 1:25 on the observed rate constant was very small at pH 4.5, a result supporting the view that the precursor exists as the known [NiMo6O24H6]4- or a close analogue in solution. The pH dependence of the observed rate constant at a fixed oxidant concentration (0.025 mol dm-3) fits dequately to the expression kobs = kH [H+]/(Ka+[H+]) where kH = 0.0013 dm3 mol-1 s-1 and Ka = 4-0x10-5. The first-order dependence on peroxodisulfate subsequently yields a second-order rate constant of 0.042 dm3 mol-1 s-1. Under analogous conditions, oxidation of manganese(II) occurs eightfold more slowly than oxidation of nickel(II), whereas oxidation of manganese(II) by peroxomonosulfuric acid is 16-fold faster than oxidation by peroxodisulfate under similar conditions.


1989 ◽  
Vol 259 (2) ◽  
pp. 443-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Kowlessur ◽  
M O'Driscoll ◽  
C M Topham ◽  
W Templeton ◽  
E W Thomas ◽  
...  

1. The pH-dependence of the second-order rate constant (k) for the reaction of actinidin (EC 3.4.22.14) with 2-(N'-acetyl-L-phenylalanylamino)ethyl 2'-pyridyl disulphide was determined and the contributions to k of various hydronic states were evaluated. 2. The data were used to assess the consequences for transition-state geometry of providing P2/S2 hydrophobic contacts in addition to hydrogen-bonding opportunities in the S1-S2 intersubsite region. 3. The P2/S2 contacts (a) substantially improve enzyme-ligand binding, (b) greatly enhance the contribution to reactivity of the hydronic state bounded by pKa 3 (the pKa characteristic of the formation of catalytic-site-S-/-ImH+ state) and pKa 5 (a relatively minor contributor in reactions that lack the P2/S2 contacts), such that the major rate optimum occurs at pH 4 instead of at pH 2.8-2.9, and (c) reveal the kinetic influence of a pKa approx. 6.3 not hitherto observed in reactions of actinidin. 4. Possibilities for the interplay of electrostatic effects and binding interactions in both actinidin and papain (EC 3.4.22.2) are discussed.


1970 ◽  
Vol 48 (11) ◽  
pp. 1249-1259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leticia Rao ◽  
T. Hofmann

The reaction of elastase with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid was investigated in the pH range 9–12. Elastase was found to be inactivated by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid. The pH dependence of the pseudo first-order inactivation rate constant showed a pK of 10.3 and gave a Hill plot coefficient of 1.15. Trinitrophenol did not inactivate the enzyme. These results indicate that the inactivation is due to the covalent reaction of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid with a single group in the enzyme. This group is not the N-terminal since the loss of N-terminal valine was considerably slower than the loss of activity at pH 10.5. The inactivation of elastase with 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene also showed no correlation with the loss of the N-terminal. When the enzyme was exhaustively treated and fully inactivated with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid at pH 10.5, the N-terminal valine and two out of three lysine residues were trinitrophenylated. No evidence for the loss of histidine was found. One of the tyrosine residues may be trinitrophenylated as judged from the molar extinction of the trinitrophenylated protein, but it has not been possible to isolate a trinitrophenylated tyrosine-containing peptide. The results can be interpreted in one of two ways: (a) trinitrophenylation of a group with a pK of 10.3, not involved in the activity, inactivates because the introduction of the trinitrophenyl residue causes a denaturation of the enzyme; or (b) a group with a pK of 10.3 controls the active conformation of the enzyme. The results do not exclude the possibility that the N-terminal plays an important role in the activity of the enzyme. Below pH 10.5 the reactivity of the N-terminal is low, indicating that it is buried.At pH 9.0 only the ε-amino group of lysine in position 224 reacted with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid and full activity was retained. The second-order rate constant for the trinitrophenylation of this group was 25 times higher than that of the ε-amino group of the α-N-benzoyllysine.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (18) ◽  
pp. 3059-3063 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Roman ◽  
H. B. Dunford ◽  
M. Evett

The kinetics of the oxidation of iodide ion by horseradish peroxidase compound II have been studied as a function of pH at 25° and ionic strength of 0.11. The logarithm of the second-order rate constant decreases linearly from 2.3 × 105 to 0.1 M−1 s−1 with increasing pH over the pH range 2.7 to 9.0. The pH dependence of the reaction is explained in terms of an acid dissociation outside the pH range of the study.


1990 ◽  
Vol 266 (3) ◽  
pp. 645-651 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Templeton ◽  
D Kowlessur ◽  
E W Thomas ◽  
C M Topham ◽  
K Brocklehurst

1. 2-(N'-Acetyl-D-phenylalanylamino)ethyl 2′-pyridyl disulphide (compound I) [m.p. 123-124 degrees C; [alpha]20D -7.1 degrees (c 0.042 in methanol)] was synthesized, and the results of a study of the pH-dependence of the second-order rate constant (k) for its reaction with the catalytic-site thiol group of papain (EC 3.4.22.2), together with existing kinetic data for the analogous reaction of the L-enantiomer (compound II), were used to evaluate the consequences for transition-state geometry of the difference in chirality at the P2 position of the probe molecule. 2. The kinetic data suggest that the D-enantiomer binds approx. 40-fold less tightly to papain than the L-enantiomer but that the binding-site-catalytic-site signalling that results in a (His-159)-Im(+)-H-assisted transition state occurs equally effectively in the interaction of the former probe as in that of the latter. This results in pH-k profiles for the reactions of both enantiomers each characterized by four macroscopic pKa values (3.7-3.9, 4.1-4.3, 7.9-8.3 and 9.4-9.5) in which k is maximal at pH approx. 6 where the -Im(+)-H-assisted transition state is most fully developed. 3. Model building indicates that both enantiomers can bind to papain such that the phenyl ring of the N-acetylphenylalanyl group makes hydrophobic contacts in the binding pocket of the S2 subsite with preservation of the three hydrogen-bonding interactions involving the substrate analogue reagent and (Asp-158) C = O, (Gly-66) C = O, and (Gly-66)-N-H of papain. Earlier predictions that binding of N-acyl-D-phenylalanine derivatives to papain would be prevented on steric grounds [Berger & Schechter (1970) Philos. Trans. R. Soc. London B 257, 249-264; Lowe & Yuthavong (1971) Biochem. J. 124, 107-115; Lowe (1976) Tetrahedron 32, 291-302] were based on assumed models that are not consistent with the X-ray-diffraction data for papain inhibited by alkylation of Cys-25 with N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Phe-Ala-chloromethane [Drenth, Kalk & Swen (1976) Biochemistry 15, 3731-3738]. 4. The possibility that the kinetic expression of P2-S2 stereospecificity may depend on the nature of the chemistry occurring in the catalytic site of papain is discussed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1976 ◽  
Vol 159 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-527 ◽  
Author(s):  
J M Armstrong ◽  
D R Trentham

D-Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate forms adducts with thiols. These adducts, which are presumed to be hemithioacetals, equilibrate rapidly with the unhydrated form of the aldehyde, which is the subtrate for D-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The adduct provides a substrate buffer system whereby a constant low free aldehyde concentration can be maintained during the oxidation of aldehyde by the enzyme and NAD+. With this system, the kinetics of the association of the aldehyde with the enzyme were examined. The rate profile for this reaction is a single exponential process, showing that all four active sites of the enzyme have equivalent and independent reactivity towards the aldehyde, with an apparent second-order rate constant of 5 × 10(7)M-1-S-1 at pH8.0 and 21 degrees C. The second-order rate constant becomes 8 × 10(7)M-1-S-1 when account is taken of the forward and reverse catalytic rate constants of the dehydrogenase. The pH-dependence of the observed rate constant is consistent with a requirement for the unprotonated form of a group of pK 6.1, which is the pK observed for second ionization of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate. The rate of phosphorolysis of the acyl-enzyme intermediate during the steady-state oxidative phosphorylation of the aldehyde was studied, and is proportional to the total Pi concentration up to at least 1 mM-Pi at pH 7.5. The pH-dependence of the rate of NADH generation under these conditions can be explained by the rate law d[NADA]/dt = k[acy] holoenzyme][PO4(3-)-A1, where thioester bond, although kinetically indistinguishable rate equations for the reaction are possible. The rates of the phosphorolysis reaction and of the aldehyde-association reaction decrease with increasing ionic strength, suggesting that the active site of the enzyme has cationic groups which are involved in the reaction of the enzyme with anionic substrates.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 582-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Cotton ◽  
H. B. Dunford

In order to investigate the nature of compounds I and II of horseradish peroxidase, the kinetics were studied of ferrocyanide oxidation catalyzed by these compounds which were prepared from three different oxidizing agents. The pH dependence of the apparent second-order rate constant for ferrocyanide oxidation by compound I, prepared from ethyl hydroperoxide and m-chloroperbenzoic acid, was interpreted in terms of an ionization on the enzyme with a pKa = 5.3, identical to that reported previously for hydrogen peroxide. The second-order rate constant for the compound II-ferrocyanide reaction also showed the same pH dependence for the three oxidizing substrates. However, with more accurate results, the compound II-ferrocyanide reaction was reinterpreted in terms of a single ionization with pKa = 8.5. The same dependence of ferrocyanide oxidation on pH suggests structurally identical active sites for compounds I and II prepared from the three different oxidizing substrates.


1983 ◽  
Vol 211 (3) ◽  
pp. 701-708 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Brocklehurst ◽  
S J F Willenbrock ◽  
E Salih

The effects of selection by a small molecule, when binding to a protein, of a particular conformation from an equilibrium stereopopulation on the characteristics of the pH-dependence of reaction with a reactivity probe or substrate were determined by analysis of an appropriate kinetic model. For reaction in one protonic state containing an equilibrium mixture of two conformational isomers, the pH-second-order rate constant (k) profile is of conventional sigmoidal form. The apparent pKa value is a composite of the pKa values of the two conformational states. The value of pKapp. for a given enzyme under given experimental conditions will always be the same (provided that the site-specificity assumed in the model is maintained) irrespective of whether only one conformation reacts or both react, with the same or with different rate constants. The experimentally determined pH-independent rate constant (kapp.) is an average of the reactivities of the two conformational states weighted in favour of the predominant form. The presence of an additional but unreactive conformational state also affects the value of kapp. The possibility that overlapping acid dissociations that affect the reactivity of the enzyme might provide pH-k profiles often indistinguishable in practice from simple sigmoidal dissociation curves and subject to variability in apparent pKa values was evaluated by a simulation study. If two reactive protonic states of the enzyme respond differently to changes in the structure of the substrate or site-specific reactivity probe, differences in apparent pKa values of up to approx. 1 unit can be exhibited without deviation from sigmoidal behaviour being reliably observed. Differences in apparent pKa values observed in some site-specific reactions of papain and their possible consequences for its catalytic mechanism are discussed.


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