Abstract

Heparinases are bacterial enzymes that are powerful tools to study the physiological roles of heparin-like complex polysaccharides. In addition, heparinases have significant therapeutic applications. We had proposed earlier that cysteine 135 and histidine 203 together form the catalytic domain in heparinase I. We had also identified a heparin binding domain in heparinase I containing two positively charged clusters HB-1 and HB-2 in a primary heparin binding site and other positively charged residues in the vicinity of cysteine 135. In this study, through systematic site-directed mutagenesis studies, we show that the alteration of the positive charge of the HB-1 region has a pronounced effect on heparinase I activity. More specifically, site-directed mutagenesis of K199A (contained in HB-1) results in a 15-fold reduction in catalytic activity, whereas a K198A mutation (also in HB-1) results in only a 2- to 3-fold reduction in heparinase I activity. A K132A mutation, in close proximity to cysteine 135, also resulted in reduced (8-fold) activity. Heparin affinity chromatography experiments indicated moderately lowered binding affinities for the K132A, K198A, and the K199A mutant enzymes. The above results, taken together with our previous observations, lead us to propose that the positively charged heparin binding domain provides the necessary microenvironment for the catalytic domain of heparinase I. The dominant effect of lysine 199 suggests an additional, more direct, role in catalysis for this residue.

Highlights

  • Heparinases are bacterial enzymes that are powerful tools to study the physiological roles of heparin-like complex polysaccharides

  • Through systematic site-directed mutagenesis studies, we show that the alteration of the positive charge of the HB-1 region has a pronounced effect on heparinase I activity

  • In a parallel study we showed that histidine 203, contained in one of the positive clusters of the primary heparin binding site, is critical for catalytic activity in heparinase I [16]

Read more

Summary

ROLE OF POSITIVE CHARGE IN ENZYMATIC ACTIVITY*

(Received for publication, July 15, 1997, and in revised form, September 5, 1997). From the Whitaker College of Health Sciences and Technology, Division of Toxicology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139. In another study, using a combination of chemical and proteolytic digests of heparinase I in direct binding and competition assays, we identified and mapped a primary heparin binding site in heparinase I spanning residues 196 –221 of the heparinase I primary sequence [15] This region contains two positively charged clusters (residues 197–204 and 207–212) as well as a calcium binding consensus motif (residues 207–220) [15]. In this study we address the role of positive charge in the primary heparin binding site in heparinase I activity using extensive site-directed mutagenesis experiments

Chemicals and Materials
NaCl concentration
Heparinase I Activity Assays
Role of Positive Charge in Catalysis of Heparinase I
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Methods
Ranga Godavarti and Ram Sasisekharan
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call