Abstract

Electrostatics are central to the function and regulation of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase, and modeling has suggested that long range electrostatic effects are likely to be important (Glackin, M. P., McCarthy, M. P., Mallikarachchi, D., Matthew, J. B., and Allewell, N. M. (1989) Proteins Struct. Funct. Genet. 5, 66-77; Oberoi, H., Trikha, J., Yuan, X., and Allewell, N. M. (1995) Proteins Struct. Funct. Genet., in press). To investigate this possibility from an experimental standpoint, we have examined the effects both of assembly and of removing ionizable and polar side chains outside the active site (Glu-50, Tyr-165, and Tyr-240) on the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of aspartate transcarbamylase. The holoenzyme (c6r6) assembles from three regulatory dimers (r2) and two catalytically active trimers (c3). pH dependences of the enzyme kinetic parameters suggest that the mechanisms of productive binding of L-Asp to the binary complexes of the catalytic subunit (c3) and holoenzyme (c6r6) with carbamyl phosphate are different. In contrast, the Michaelis complex appears similar for both c3 and c6r6, except for pK shifts of approximately 1 pH unit. Results also indicate that the catalytic mechanism of the holoenzyme does not involve reverse protonation, as has recently been proposed for the catalytic trimer (Turnbull, J. L., Waldrop, G. L., and Schachman, H. K. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 6562-6569). The tyrosines at positions 165 and 240 are part of a cluster of interactions that links the catalytic subunits in the T state (the cluc4 interface) and which is disrupted in the T --> R transition. The effects of mutating the two Tyr residues are quite different: Y240F has higher than wild-type activity and affinity over the entire pH range, while Y165F has activity and affinity an order of magnitude lower than wild-type. Removal of the regulatory subunits from Y165F increases activity and affinity and restores the pH dependence of the wild-type catalytic subunit. Like Y165F, E50A has low activity and affinity over the entire pH range. Linkage analysis indicates that there is long range energetic coupling among the active site, the ear subunit interfaces, and residue Y165. The substantial quantitative difference between Y165F and Y240F, both of which are at the c1:c4 interface about 14-16 A from the closest active site, demonstrates specific path dependence, as opposed to general distance dependence, of interactions between this interface and the active site.

Highlights

  • Onstrates specific path dependence, as opposed to general distance dependence, of interactions between this interface and the active site

  • Electrostatics and pH Dependence of Aspartate Transcarbamylase et al, 1992a, 1992b). pK values of groups involved in binding and/or catalysis have been derived from the pH dependence of the kinetic parameters of c3 (Leger and Herve, 1988; Turnbull et al, 1992), and a model involving three active site residues has been proposed (Turnbull et al, 1992)

  • The effects of the mutations on both activity and affinity are much greater than the effects of pH, i.e. while both the Km app and Vmax of the low activity mutants (E50A and Y165F) span a 4 –5-fold range dependent on pH, they both differ by an order of magnitude in their affinity and activity from the wild-type and Y240F enzymes

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Summary

Introduction

Onstrates specific path dependence, as opposed to general distance dependence, of interactions between this interface and the active site. The switch to the high affinity R structure eliminates contacts between c3 subunits (the C1:C4 interface), one set of c3-r2 contacts and domain interactions in the r chain but simultaneously strengthens a second set of c3-r2 contacts, interchain interactions in c3 and interdomain interactions in c chains Critical features of this transition include large movements of the 80s and 240s loops in the c chains and closure of the c chain domains (see Fig. 1). Because both the substrates of aspartate transcarbamylase and its regulatory nucleotides have several negative charges, electrostatic effects might be expected to figure heavily in both catalysis and the allosteric mechanism. Computer modeling indicates that these linkages result from large changes in the pKa values of groups widely distributed throughout the molecule (Glackin et al, 1989, 1991).

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