Abstract
Interaction of a 70-amino acid zinc-binding polypeptide from the regulatory chain of aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) with the catalytic (C) subunit leads to dramatic changes in enzyme activity and affinity for ligand binding at the active sites. The complex between the polypeptide (zinc domain) and wild-type C trimer exhibits hyperbolic kinetics in contrast to the sigmoidal kinetics observed with the intact holoenzyme. Moreover, the Scatchard plot for binding N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) to the complex is linear with a Kd corresponding to that evaluated for the holoenzyme converted to the relaxed (R) state. Additional evidence that the binding of the zinc domain to the C trimer converts it to the R state was attained with a mutant form of ATCase in which Lys 164 in the catalytic chain is replaced by Glu. As shown previously (Newell, J.O. & Schachman, H.K., 1990, Biophys. Chem. 37, 183-196), this mutant holoenzyme, which exists in the R conformation even in the absence of active site ligands, has a 50-fold greater affinity for PALA than the free C subunit. Adding the zinc domain to the C trimer containing the Lys 164-->Glu substitution leads to a 50-fold enhancement in the affinity for the bisubstrate analog yielding a value of Kd equal to that for the holoenzyme. A different mutant ATCase containing the Gln 231 to Ile replacement was shown (Peterson, C.B., Burman, D.L., & Schachman, H.K., 1992, Biochemistry 31, 8508-8515) to be much less active as a holoenzyme than as the free C trimer. For this mutant holoenzyme, the addition of substrates does not cause its conversion to the R state. However, the addition of the zinc domain to the Gln 231-->Ile C trimer leads to a marked increase in enzyme activity, and PALA binding data indicate that the complex resembles the R state of the holoenzyme. This interaction leading to a more active conformation serves as a model of intergenic complementation in which peptide binding to a protein causes a conformational correction at a site remote from the interacting surfaces resulting in activation of the protein. This linkage was also demonstrated by difference spectroscopy using a chromophore covalently bound at the active site, which served as a spectral probe for a local conformational change. The binding of ligands at the active sites was shown also to lead to a strengthening of the interaction between the zinc domain and the C trimer.
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More From: Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society
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