Abstract

(S)-Mandelate dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas putida, a member of the flavin mononucleotide-dependent alpha-hydroxy acid oxidase/dehydrogenase family, oxidizes (S)-mandelate to benzoylformate. The enzyme was purified with a carboxy-terminal histidine tag. Steady-state kinetic parameters indicate that it preferentially binds large substrates. A good correlation was obtained between the kcat, the substrate kinetic isotope effect (KIE), and the pKa of the substrate alpha-proton. The kcat decreased and the KIE increased for substrates whose alpha-protons have pKas higher than that of mandelate. These results support a mechanism involving a carbanion intermediate but are difficult to reconcile with one involving a direct hydride transfer. pH effects on steady-state parameters were determined with (S)-mandelate and a slow substrate, (R,S)-3-phenyllactate. The kcat/Km pH profile shows that two groups with apparent pKas of 5.5 and 8.9 in the free enzyme are important for activity. These pKas are shifted to 5.1 and 9.6 on binding (S)-mandelate, as shown in the kcat pH profile. The pH dependence of the KIEs suggests that the residues with these pKas are involved in the alpha-carbon-hydrogen bond-breaking step. pH dependencies of the inhibition constants for competitive inhibitors identified these residues as histidine 274 and arginine 277. We propose that histidine 274 is the base that abstracts the substrate alpha-proton and arginine 277 is important for substrate binding as well as stabilization of the carbanion/enolate intermediate.

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