Abstract

The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):glycose phosphotransferase system (PTS) mediates uptake/phosphorylation of sugars. The transport of all PTS sugars requires Enzyme I (EI) and a phosphocarrier histidine protein of the PTS (HPr). The PTS is stringently regulated, and a potential mechanism is the monomer/dimer transition of EI, because only the dimer accepts the phosphoryl group from PEP. EI monomer consists of two major domains, at the N and C termini (EI-N and EI-C, respectively). EI-N accepts the phosphoryl group from phospho-HPr but not PEP. However, it is phosphorylated by PEP(Mg(2+)) when complemented with EI-C. Here we report that the phosphotransfer rate increases approximately 25-fold when HPr is added to a mixture of EI-N, EI-C, and PEP(Mg(2+)). A model to explain this effect is offered. Sedimentation equilibrium results show that the association constant for dimerization of EI-C monomers is 260-fold greater than the K(a) for native EI. The ligands have no detectable effect on the secondary structure of the dimer (far UV CD) but have profound effects on the tertiary structure as determined by near UV CD spectroscopy, thermal denaturation, sedimentation equilibrium and velocity, and intrinsic fluorescence of the 2 Trp residues. The binding of PEP requires Mg(2+). For example, there is no effect of PEP on the T(m), an increase of 7 degrees C in the presence of Mg(2+), and approximately 14 degrees C when both are present. Interestingly, the dissociation constants for each of the ligands from EI-C are approximately the same as the kinetic (K(m)) constants for the ligands in the complete PTS sugar phosphorylation assays.

Highlights

  • The phosphoryl group is transferred from P-histidine protein of the phosphotransferase system (PTS) (HPr) to the sugarspecific proteins

  • Enzyme I (EI)-N isolated after proteolysis of intact EI was not phosphorylated by PEP but did react with phospho-HPr, and the same result was obtained with molecularly cloned EI-N [9], which was identical in all respects to EI-N isolated by proteolysis (Reaction 3)

  • Reaction I: EI-C Monomer/Dimer Transition—Sedimentation equilibrium results showed that EI-C is qualitatively similar to native EI in its associative properties, namely that it is cold-sensitive and affected positively by one of its ligands, Mg2ϩ

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Summary

Introduction

The phosphoryl group is transferred from P-HPr to the sugarspecific proteins. The properties of EI have been reviewed previously [4, 5]. The present studies are concerned with determining the association constant of the EI-C monomers, its interactions with the two ligands Mg2ϩ and PEP, and their effects on some important properties of the polypeptide.

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