Abstract

The amidotransferase domain (GLNase) of mammalian carbamyl-phosphate synthetase II hydrolyzes glutamine and transfers ammonia to the synthetase domain where carbamyl phosphate is formed in a three-step reaction sequence. The synthetase domain consists of two homologous subdomains, CPS.A and CPS.B. Recent studies suggest that CPS.A catalyzes the initial ATP dependent-activation of bicarbonate, whereas CPS.B uses a second ATP to form carbamyl phosphate. To establish the function of these substructural elements, we have cloned and expressed the mammalian protein and its subdomains in Escherichia coli. Recombinant CPSase (GLNase-CPS.A-CPS.B) was found to be fully functional. Two other proteins were made; the first consisted of only GLNase and CPS.A, whereas the second lacked CPS.A and had the GLNase domain fused directly to CPS.B. Remarkably, both proteins catalyzed the entire series of reactions involved in glutamine-dependent carbamyl phosphate synthesis. The stoichiometry, like that of the native enzyme, was 2 mol of ATP utilized per mol of carbamyl phosphate formed. GLN-CPS.B is allosterically regulated, whereas GLN-CPS.A was insensitive to effectors, a result consistent with evidence showing that allosteric effectors bind to CPS.B. These properties are not peculiar to the mammalian protein, because the separately cloned CPS.A subdomain of the E. coli enzyme was also found to catalyze carbamyl phosphate synthesis. Gel filtration chromatography and chemical cross-linking studies showed that these molecules are dimers, a structural organization that may be a prerequisite for the overall reaction. Thus, the homologous CPS.A and CPS.B subdomains are functionally equivalent, although in the native enzyme they may have different functions resulting from their juxtaposition relative to the other components in the complex.

Highlights

  • Carbamyl-phosphate synthetase catalyzes the formation of carbamyl phosphate from glutamine, bicarbonate, and 2 mol of ATP [1,2,3]

  • The mechanism has been established for Escherichia coli CPSase1 by measuring the partial reactions, trapping intermediates, and positional isotope exchange (4 –10) and is thought to be general for all members of this family of enzymes [1]

  • Glutamine is hydrolyzed (Reaction 1) on a separate amidotransferase domain or subunit and ammonia is transferred to the synthetase component of the complex, which catalyzes all of the other partial reactions

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Summary

Introduction

Carbamyl-phosphate synthetase catalyzes the formation of carbamyl phosphate from glutamine, bicarbonate, and 2 mol of ATP [1,2,3]. Chemical modification studies of E. coli [30], CAD [31], and the mitochondrial urea cycle enzymes [29, 32] have shown that ATP analogs bind to both halves of the synthetase domain. These affinity reagents differentially affect the two ATP-dependent partial reactions. CPS.A catalyzes the initial ATP-dependent activation of bicarbonate, whereas the synthesis of carbamyl phosphate from carbamate occurs on CPS.B. To obtain further evidence for this model, we have separately cloned and expressed the two CPSase subdomains of CAD and obtained the unexpected result that CPS.A and CPS.B are functionally equivalent

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