Abstract
To determine the importance of specific amino-acid residues in catalysis and substrate binding by N 10-formylH 4folate synthetase, one lysine and three histidine residues in the enzyme from Clostridium cylindrosporum were mutated to glutamine and serine residues, respectively. These residues, Lys-71, His-125, His-131, and His-268, are conserved in four bacterial and five eukaryotic proteins for which the amino-acid sequences are known. Previous evidence indicated that a histidine residue may play a role in catalysis and it has been proposed that Lys-71 could be a member of a putative nucleotide binding consenus sequence. The histidine mutations, H125S, H131S, and H268S, produced proteins that were unstable and were proteolytically degraded to different extents. No activity of purified H268S could be detected and the 240 kDa native tetramer was also absent. Activities of the H125S and H131S mutants could be measured and the K m values of the substrates were similar to those for the wild-type enzyme. It is concluded that the mutations resulted in monomers that do not fold properly and/or do not associate to the active tetramer and, as a consequence, are susceptible to intracellular proteolytic digestion. On the other hand, the K71Q mutation did not produce proteolyzed material. The resulting protein had a k cat value which was reduced by a factor of 3.3 × 10 −4. K m values of the substrates were not affected, nor were the affinty constants for MgATP and H 4PteG 3. CD and fluorescence spectra demonstrated that little change in the tertiary structure of the protein had occurred as a result of the mutation. The monomer form of K71Q was less stable than the monomer of the wild-type enzyme and reassociated less efficiently than the wild-type. From these results it is suggested that Lys-71 plays a critical role in catalysis by N 10-formylH 4folate synthetase and that this residue may reside at an intersubunit interface.
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More From: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)/Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology
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