No abstract
Cpn60 was labeled with pyrene maleimide in order to follow structural rearrangements in the protein triggered by the binding of nucleotides and cpn10. The conjugate binds ATP, AMP-PNP, and ADP(P(i)) with pyrene fluorescence enhancements of 60%, 60%, and 15%, respectively. In each case, binding is cooperative with half-saturation (K1/2) occurring at 10 microM, 290 microM, and 2500 microM and Hill constants (nH) of 4, 3, and 3, respectively. Inclusion of the co-protein, cpn10, tightens the binding of ATP, AMP-PNP, and ADP(P(i)) to give K1/2 values of 6 microM, 100 microM, and < 0.07 microM, respectively, and cooperativity is increased. Titration of the cpn60/ADP (14-mer) complex with cpn10 (7-mer) gives a stoichiometry of 14:7 with respect to subunits, confirming the molecular asymmetry shown by electron microscopy. Transient kinetics demonstrate that ATP initially forms a weak collision complex with cpn60 (Kd = 4 mM) which isomerizes to the strongly binding state at a rate of 180 s-1. We suggest that the slow structural rearrangement driven by ATP binding is the same event which lowers the affinity of the chaperonin for protein substrates; a suggestion reinforced by the loss of AMP-PNP binding affinity in the presence of an unstructured polypeptide. As such, this rearrangement of cpn60 is analogous to a force-generating step in energy transduction. Measurements of ATP hydrolysis (pH 7.5, 25 degrees C) show that it is slow (0.04 s-1) compared both with the structural rearrangement and with the dissociation of products. This defines the steady-state complex as cpn60/ATP, a form of the chaperonin which binds substrate proteins weakly. The rate of hydrolysis of ATP is stimulated 20-fold upon binding unfolded lactate dehydrogenase, and the yield of folded enzyme is increased even in the absence of cpn10. Addition of this co-protein inhibits hydrolysis on only half of the sites in cpn60 and leads to a faster release of folded LDH. A mechanism for the action of chaperonins is proposed which depends upon cpn60 being cycled between states which have, alternately, low and high affinity for unfolded proteins. This cycle is driven by the binding and hydrolysis of ATP.
Three variations to the structure of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-dependent L-lactate dehydrogenase from Bacillus stearothermophilus were made to try to change the substrate specificity from lactate to malate: Asp197----Asn, Thr246----Gly, and Gln102----Arg). Each modification shifts the specificity from lactate to malate, although only the last (Gln102----Arg) provides an effective and highly specific catalyst for the new substrate. This synthetic enzyme has a ratio of catalytic rate (kcat) to Michaelis constant (Km) for oxaloacetate of 4.2 x 10(6)M-1 s-1, equal to that of native lactate dehydrogenase for its natural substrate, pyruvate, and a maximum velocity (250 s-1), which is double that reported for a natural malate dehydrogenase from B. stearothermophilus.
The Raman spectra of both the NAD-pyruvate and the pyridine aldehyde adenine dinucleotide (PAAD)-pyruvate bound to pig heart, pig muscle, and Bacillus stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenases were measured and are nearly the same, which is consistent with the conserved shell of residues surrounding the active-site cavity in these enzymes. The symmetrical stretching mode of the pyruvate carboxylate group, found at 1398 cm-1, is shifted only slightly when complexed to these enzymes, which shows that the group remains ionized in the ion pair complex with Arg-171 on the enzyme. The vibrational mode for the carbonyl stretch of the bound pyruvate moiety is shifted about 35 cm-1 to a lower frequency than observed for the carbonyl of unliganded pyruvate in the bacterial enzyme because of polarization of the carbonyl bond. Thus, the bacterial enzyme shows the same substrate activation because of the C(+)-O- charge separation that was seen previously with the mammalian enzymes. On the basis of an empirical Badger-Bauer relationship between frequency shift and interaction enthalpy, this shift in frequency is equivalent to an approximately -14 to -17 kcal/mol interaction between the enzyme and the adduct C = O coordinate, a substantial part of which is an electrostatic interaction (hydrogen bond) between the C V O and the protonated His-195. Thus, while the C = O bond is polarized on the enzyme (which requires energy), the overall ground-state enthalpy of the carbonyl imidazolium part of the reaction coordinate is stability substantially relative to its value in solution, and this is the dominant enthalpic effect on the entire reaction coordinate since the other internal coordinates for the hydride transfer are not much affected during formation of the ternary complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
1. No discontinuities were observed during the continuous titration with NADH of the lactate dehydrogenases of ox muscle, pig heart, pig muscle, rabbit muscle, dogfish muscle or lobster tail muscle. The binding was monitored by either the enhanced fluorescence of bound NADH or the quenched fluorescence of the protein. A single macroscopic dissociation constant, independent of protein concentration, could be used to describe the binding to each enzyme, and there was no need to postulate the involvement of molecular relaxation effects. 2. The affinity for NADH decreases only threefold between pH6 and 8.5. Above pH9 the affinity decreases more rapidly with increasing pH and is consistent with a group of about pK9.5 facilitating binding. Muscle enzymes bind NADH more weakly than does the pig heart enzyme. 3. Increasing temperature and increasing concentrations of ethanol both weaken NADH binding. 4. NADH binding is weakened by increasing ionic strength. NaCl is more effective than similar ionic strengths derived from sodium phosphate or sodium pyrophosphate. 5. Commercial NAD(+) quenches the protein fluorescence of the heart and muscle isoenzymes. Highly purified NAD(+) does not, and its binding was monitored by competition for the NADH-binding sites. A single macroscopic dissociation constant is sufficient to describe NAD(+) binding at the concentrations tested. The dissociation constant is about 0.3mm and is not sensitive to changed ionic strength and to changed pH in the range pH6-8.5.
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