Abstract

To probe the nature of the interconversion of the two unliganded forms of proline racemase, a number of experiments have been performed under oversaturating conditions where the rate of the enzymic reaction is mainly limited by the rate of this interconversion. Competitive deuterium washout experiments, where an equimolar mixture of D- and L-proline (in which some or all of one enantiomer is specifically deuterated at the 2-position) is allowed to reach chemical and isotopic equilibrium mediated by the enzyme, have been followed in four ways. The size and the rate of achievement of the maximum perturbation in the optical rotation have been measured, the deuterium content of the substrate at this maximum has been determined, and the final approach to equilibrium after the perturbation maximum has been followed. Further, the enzyme-catalyzed rate of tritium loss from [2-3H]proline has been established. Finally, it has been shown that the enzyme interconversion reaction is catalyzed by several buffers (such as ammonium, hydrazinium, and hydrogen sulfide). These data are discussed in terms of Marcus' theory, which allows a rather detailed picture of the mechanism of free enzyme interconversion to be drawn. This process nicely parallels the mechanism of the enzyme-catalyzed interconversion of the proline enantiomers, and it is evident that substrate racemization (with the concomitant switch of the enzyme-bound protons) is mirrored by the water-mediated switch of the enzyme-bound protons that effects the interconversion of the free enzyme forms. The results favor a stepwise reaction for the interconversion of the free enzyme forms in which a proton is abstracted from a bound water molecule to give a reaction intermediate having a hydroxide ion bound to the diprotonated form of the enzyme.

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