Abstract

Aminoglycoside nucleotidyltransferase 2''-I conveys multiple antibiotic resistance to Gram-negative bacteria because the enzyme adenylylates a broad range of aminoglycoside antibiotics as substrates [Gates, C. A., & Northrop, D. B. (1988) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. The enzyme also catalyzes the transfer of a variety of nucleotides [Van Pelt, J. E., & Northrop, D. B. (1984) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 230, 250-263]. This doubly broad substrate specificity makes it an excellent candidate for application of the alternative substrate diagnostic [Radika, K., & Northrop, D. B. (1984) Anal. Biochem. 141, 413-417] as a means to determine its kinetic mechanism. The kinetic patterns presented here are composed of one set of intersecting lines and one coincident line and are consistent with a Theorell-Chance kinetic mechanism in which nucleotide binding precedes aminoglycosides, pyrophosphate is released prior to the nucleotidylated aminoglycoside (Q), and turnover is controlled by the rate-limiting release of the final product. Substrate inhibition by tobramycin (B) is partial and uncompetitive versus Mg-ATP, indicating that B binds to the EQ complex, but not in the usual dead-end fashion common to an ordered sequential release of products; instead, Q may escape from the abortive EQB complex at a finite rate. Dead-end inhibition by neomycin C (I) is also partial and uncompetitive versus Mg-ATP but is slope-linear, intercept-hyperbolic, partial noncompetitive versus gentamicin A; both kinetic patterns signify the formation of a partial abortive EQI complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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