chapter 9 catalytic strategies

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Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

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Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies. 4 classes of enzymes. Protease Carbonic anhydrase Restriction endonuclease Myosins Structural and mechanistic comparisons of enzyme action are the sources of insight into the evolutionary history of enzymes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Chapter 9

Catalytic Strategies

Page 2: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

4 classes of enzymes.

1. Protease2. Carbonic anhydrase3. Restriction endonuclease4. Myosins

Structural and mechanistic comparisons of enzyme action are the sources of insight into the evolutionary history of enzymes.

Page 3: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

9.1 Proteases facilitate a fundamentally difficult reaction

- Proteins must be degraded to that their constituent amino acids can be recycled for the synthesis of new proteins.

Page 4: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

- In the absence of a catalyst, the half-life for the hydrolysis of a peptide at neutral pH is estimated to be between 10 and 1000 years.

- But, peptide bonds must be hydrolyzed within milliseconds in some biochemical processes.

Page 5: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Chymotrypsin possesses a highly reactive serine redisue

- Chymotrypsin cleaves peptide bonds

selectively on the carboxyl-terminal side of

the large hydrophobic amino acids such as

tryptophan, tyrosine, phenylalanine, and

methionine.

Page 6: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Chymotrypsin is a good example of the use of “covalent catalysis”

-Employs a powerful nucleophile to attack the unreactive carbonyl carbon atom of the substrate.

- DIPF(diisopropylphosphofluoridate) treatment → Serine 195 modification → activity irreversibly

Page 7: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Chymotrypsin action proceeds in two steps linked by a covalently bound intermediate

- N-Acetyl-L-phenylalanine p-nitrophenyl ester :

chromogenic substrate of Chymotrypsin.

- Product : Yellow colored nitrophenolate(by

Chymotrypsin cleavage)

Substrate

Product

Ester bond

Page 8: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Product measurement : absorbance of light(amount of p-

nitrophenolate)

-Under steady-state conditions, Km = 20μM, kcat = 77s-1

-Hydrolysis (by Chymotrypsin) proceeds in two steps.

-1). Burst phase (rapid)

-2). Steady-state phase

Page 9: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Burst phase Steady-state phase

-Burst phase : the acyl group of the substrate becomes covalently attached to the enzyme as p-nitrophenolate.

(acyl-enzyme intermediate)

-Steady-state phase : acyl-enzyme intermediate is hydrolyzed to release the carboxylic acid component of the substrate and regenerate the free enzyme; it takes longer for the enzyme to be reset.

Page 10: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Serine is part of a catalytic triad that also includes histidine and aspartate

-The three-dimensional structure of chymotrypsin was solved by David Blow in 1967.

-It is synthesized as a single polypeptide, termed Chymotrypsinogen, which is activated by the proteolytic cleavage to yield the three chains.[1GCT.pdb]

Page 11: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-The active site of chymotrypsin, marked by serine 195, lies in a cleft on the surface of the enzyme.

-This side chain of serine 195 is hydrogen bonded to the imidazole ring of histidine 57.

cleft

Page 12: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Substrate binding

Nucleophilic attack

Tetrahedral intermediate(acyl-enzyme)

Amine component free

Water mediated deacylation

OH- Attacks the carbonyl carbon

Carboxylic acid product

Burst phase

Steady-state phase

Page 13: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Four atoms bounded to the

carbonyl carbon, arranged as

a tetrahedron.

-Tetrahedron intermediate

formed bears a formal

negative charge .

-This charge is stabilized

by interactions with NH

groups from the protein in a

site termed the oxyanion

hole.

Page 14: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Preference for

cleaving the peptide

bonds just past

residues with large,

hydrophobic side

chains.

-Chymotrypsin has a

deep, hydrophobic

pocket, called the S1

pocket.

Page 15: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Other proteases have more complex

specificity patterns.

-Such enzymes have additional pockets on

their surfaces for the recognition of their

residues in the substrate.

Page 16: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Catalytic triads are found in other hydrolytic enzymes

- Trypsin and elastase are obvious homologs of chymotrypsin.

- 40% sequence identity with chymotrypsin.

Red : chymotrypsinBlue : trypsin

Page 17: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Chymotrypsin- Cleaves after residues with an aromatic or long nonpolar side

chains.

Trypsin-Cleaves after residues with an long, positively charged side chains. (R.K)-Asp189 at bottom of the S1 pocket

Elastase-Cleaves after residues with a small

side chains. (A.S)-Val190 and Val216 at bottom of the S1 pocket

Similar structure

Page 18: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Subtilisin : a protease in bacteria(Bacillus amyloliquefaciens). not homologs of chymotrypsin, but similar active site.

-The active site of this enzyme includes both the catalytic triad

and the oxyanion hole.

-NH groups, side chain from Asn located in the oxylanion hole

rather than from the peptide backbone.

Page 19: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Carboxypeptidase : from wheat. not similar to either chymotrypsin or subtilisin structures.

- Catalytic triad of carboxypeptidase is composed

of the same amino acids as those in chymotrypsin.

Page 20: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

The catalytic triad has been dissected by site-directed mutagenesis

- Each of the residues within the catalytic triad of Subtilisin, (Aspartate32, Histidine64, and Serine221) has been individually converted into alanine. S221A dramatically

reduced catalytic power by 106.

H64A reduced catalytic power to a similar degree.

N155G in subtilisin reduced by 50 fold

Page 21: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Cysteine, Aspartyl, and Metalloproteases are other major classes of peptide-cleaving enzyme.

- A cys residue, activated by a his, plays the role of the nucleophile that attacks the peptide bond.

-Ex). Papain : purified from the fruit of the papaya. -Caspases

Page 22: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Cysteine, Aspartyl, and Metalloproteases are other major classes of peptide-cleaving enzyme.

- A pair of aspartic acid residues that act together to allow a water molecule to attack the peptide bond. One aspartic acid activates the attacking water molecule. The other polarizes the peptide carbonyl group.- Ex). Renin : having a role in the regulation of blood pressure. Pepsin : the digestive enzyme. HIV protease

Page 23: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

HIV protease : a dimeric aspartyl protease

Page 24: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Cysteine, Aspartyl, and Metalloproteases are other major classes of peptide-cleaving enzyme.

- The active site of such a protein contains a bound metal ion, almost always zinc, that activates a water molecule to act as a nucleophile to attack the peptide carbonyl group.

- Ex). Thermolysin : bacterial enzyme Carboxypeptidase : digesitve enzyme

glutamate

Page 25: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Protease inhibitors are important drugs

-Several important drugs are protease inhibitors.

-Ex). Indinavir : Inhibitor of HIV protease, which is an aspartyl

protease. Mimics the tetrahedral intermediate. -To prevent unwanted side effects, protease inhibitors used as drugs must be specific.

Page 26: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

- X-ray crystallography revealed that, in the

active site, indinavir adopts a conformation

that approximates the twofold symmetry of the

enzyme.

Page 27: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

(1) Cysteine proteases: • quite analogous to serine protease • histidine-activated cysteine residue as a nucleophile e.g., papain, cathepsin, caspases

(2) Aspartyl proteases:• approximate two-fold symmetry• a pair of Asp at active site; asymmetric mode of action • aspartate-activated water molecule as a nucleophile • general acid-base catalyst e.g., renin, pepsin, dimeric aspartyl protease of HIV

(3) Metalloproteases: • almost always Zn++ at the active site • metal-activated water molecule as a nucleophile • base (often, Glu) helps deprotonate the metal bound

water • No covalent intermediate• e.g., matrix metalloproteases

Page 28: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Activation strategies for three classes of proteases

In each of these classes of enzymes,the active site includes features that allow for

(1) the activation of water or another nucleophile(2) the polarization of the peptide carbonyl group (3) subsequent stabilization of a tetrahedral intermediate

Page 29: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

9.2 Carbonic anhydrases make a fast reaction faster

CO2 = end product of metabolism Strong acid (pKa = 3.5)

Even in the absence of a catalyst, this hydration reaction proceeds at a moderate rate.But carbonic anhydrase speeds up carbon dioxide hydration and HCO3

- dehydration! (Kcat = 106 s-1)In red blood cell (carbon dioxide hydration), Blood lungs (HCO3

- dehydration)Concentration of H2O = 55.5 M

Page 30: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Carbonic anhydrase contains a bound zinc ion essential for catalytic activity

- Carbonic anhydrase contains Zinc ion; first known zinc-containing

enzyme.

- Zinc ion is necessary for catalytic activity.

- At least 7 carbonic anhydrase in human.

- Carbonic anhydrase Ⅱ is the most extensively studied.

- Three coordination sites are occupied by the imidazole rings of three

His.

Page 31: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Metal ion• 1/3 of all enzymes contain metal ion.

• Properties 1.positive charges, 2.ability to form relatively strong yet kinetically labile bonds,

3.more than one oxidation state; iron(II) sulphate, iron(III) chloride

Page 32: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

How does this zinc complex facilitate carbon dioxide hydration?

-At pH8, the reaction proceeds near its maximal rate.

-The midpoint of this transition is near pH7.

-Loss of proton at pH7 is important

<Effect of pH on carbonic anhydrase>

Major clue from pH profile

histidine (pK a=6)

Page 33: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

- The binding of a water molecule to the positively

charged zinc center reduces the pKa of the water molecule

from 15.7 to 7.

- A zinc-bound hydroxide ion (OH-) is a potent nucleophile

able to attack carbon dioxide.

Nucleophile attack

Page 34: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Release of a proton from waterGenerate a hydroxide ion

CO2 bond to hydrophobic active site

HO- attacks CO2 converting it into HCO3-

Catalytic site is regenerated with the release of HCO3- and binding another water.

Page 35: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Synthetic analog model system.

An organic compound, capable of binding zinc(like His in enzyme).Water-zinc-compound complex accelerates the hydration of CO2. The model system strongly suggests that

the zinc-bound hydroxide mechanism is correct.

Page 36: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

A proton shuttle facilitates rapid regeneration of the active form of the enzyme

In the first step of a CO2 hydration reaction, the zinc-bound water molecule must lose a proton to regenerate the active form of the enzyme. The rate of reverse reaction, the protonation of the zinc-bound hydroxide ion, is limited by the rate of proton diffusion

Equilibrium constant

K-1 = 1011 M-1s-1 because proton diffusion rate 10-11 M-1s-1 So, K1 = 104 M-1s-1 then, How carbon dioxide is hydrated at 106s-1 ?

Page 37: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

The deprotonation of the zinc-bound water molecule in carbonic anhydrase is aided by buffer component B.

Page 38: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

The rate of carbon dioxide hydration increases with the

concentration of the buffer 1,2-dimethylbenzimidazole.

The buffer enables the enzyme to achieve its high catalytic rates.

Page 39: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

① His 64 abstracts a proton from the zinc-bound water molecule, generating a nucleophilic hydroxide ion and a protonated His.

② The buffer B removes a proton form the His, regenerating the unprotonated form.

Many buffers are too large to reach the active site of carbonic anhydrase. So proton shuttle is necessary (carbonic anhydrase II)

Many biochemical reactions show the prominence of acid-base catalysis

Page 40: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Convergent evolution has generated zinc-based active sites in different carbonic anhydrases

- In addition to a-carbonic anhydrases, two other families of carbonic

anhydrases have been discovered.

- β-carbonic anhydrases : found in higher plants and in many bacteria.

Zinc ion is bound by one His and two Cys.

- γ-carbonic anhydrases : identified in the archaeon Methanosarcina

thermophila. Three zinc sites similar to α-carbonic anhydrase. But zinc sites

lie at the interfaces between the three subunits of a trimeric enzyme.

Page 41: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

9.3 Restriction enzymes perform highly specific DNA-cleavage

reactions

-EcoRV cleaves double-stranded viral DNA molecules that contain the seq.5’ GATATC 3’ but leaves host DNA.-The host DNA is protected by other enzymes called methylases, which methylate adenine bases within host recognition seq.-For each restriction enzymes, corresponding methylases exist.

Methylated

Viral

Host

-Bacteria evolved mechanism to protect themselves from viral infections; restriction endonucleases

Page 42: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Cleavage is by in-line displacement of 3’-oxygen from phosphorus by magnesium-activated water

-Restriction endonuclease catalyzes the hydrolysis of the

phosphodiester backbone of DNA.

-Product : free 3’-hydroxyl group + 5’ phosphoryl group

-Hydrolysis of a phosphodiester bond

-Possible two mechanisms

Page 43: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Mechanism 1 (covalent intermediate) : analogy with chymotrypsin: two displacement, retained configuration

Page 44: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Mechanism 2 (direct hydrolysis): analogy with asparty protease and metalloproteases: one displacement, inverted configuration

Page 45: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Each mechanism postulates a different nucleophile to attack the phosphorus.

In either case, each reaction takes place by in-line displacement inducing the interconversion of the configuration.

How to figure out the stereochemistry of the product?

Trigonal bipyramidal geometry

Page 46: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

- In case of EcoRV, this enzyme cleaves the phosphodiester bond between the T and the A at the center of the recognition seq.

- Oxygen atom in the cleavage site is replaced by a sulfur.

Page 47: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Water 18O labeled

The hydrolysis takes place by water’s direct attack at the phosphorus atom.

Page 48: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Restriction enzymes require magnesium for catalytic activity-One or more Mg2+ cations are essential to the function of

restriction endonucleases.

-This metal ion is coordinated to the protein through two aspartate.

-The Magnesium ion helps to activate a water molecule and positions it

so that it can attack the phosphorus.

H2O

Page 49: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

The complete catalytic apparatus is assembled only within complexes of cognate DNA molecules, ensuring specificity

- The recognition seq. for restriction endonucleases are inverted repeats.

- This arrangement gives the three-dimensional structure of the recognition site a twofold rotational symmetry.

Page 50: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

The structure of EcoRV (dimer) bound to a cognate DNA fragment.

Page 51: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

5’ – G A T A T C – 3’

3’ – C T A T A G – 5’

Page 52: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-The most striking feature of this complex is the distortion of

the DNA, which is kinked in the center.

-The central two TA base pairs in the recognition seq. play a

key role in producing the kink even no contact with enzyme.

Page 53: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

- The noncognate DNA conformation is not substantially distorted.

cognatenon-cognate

- This lack of distortion has important consequences with regard to catalysis.-No phosphate is positioned sufficiently close to the active-site aspartate residues to complete a Mg2+ binding site.-DNA distortion and subsequent Mg2+ binding account for the catalytic specificity

Page 54: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-The distorted DNA makes

additional contacts with the

enzyme, increasing the binding

energy

- The increase is canceled by the

energetic cost of DNA distortions.

- Interactions that take place within the distorted substrate

complex stabilize the transition state leading to DNA

hydrolysis.

Page 55: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-The distortion in the DNA explains

how methylation blocks catalysis

and protects host DNA.

-The presence of the methyl group

blocks the formation of a

hydrogen bond between the

amino group and the side-chain

carbonyl group of Asn185.

-Asn185 is closely linked to the

other residues of specific contact

with the DNA

-Leading to the no distortion of

DNA

Page 56: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

TypeⅡ restriction enzymes have a catalytic core in common and are probably related by horizontal gene transfer

No significant seq. similarity. However, a core structures are conserved. It includes strands (blue) that contain the aspartate residues of the Mg-binding sites.

Horizontal gene transfer: passing between species of pieces of DNA (plasmid).Representative example: antibiotics

Page 57: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

9.4 Myosins Harness Changes in EnzymeConformation to Couple ATP Hydrolysis to Mechanical Work

- Myosins catalyze the hydrolysis of ATP

to form ADP & Pi

- Thermodynamically favorable reaction

Page 58: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

ATP hydrolysis proceeds by the attack of water on the gamma phosphoryl group

Myosin-ATP complex structure with or without ATP & Mg

• Myosin structure revealed a water-filled pocket.• Myosin crystal soaked with ATP; No conformational change.• Divalent metal ions (Mg2+ , Mn2+ ) are required for activity.

Page 59: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Myosin are essentially inactive in the absence of metal ions

(Mg2+, Mn2+).

-Nucleotides bind these ions, and it is the metal ion-nucleotide

complex that is the true substrate for the enzymes.

-Kd of ATP-Mg2+ complex ~0.1mM, Mg2+ conc in cytosol is mM

range. So?

• Nucleophilic attack by a water requires a basic residue or bound metal to activate the water

• ATP hydrolysis includes a pentacoordinate transition state.

Page 60: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Mechanism of ATP hydrolysis

• Water molecule attacks the g-phosphoryl group, with the hydroxyl group of Ser236, which is deprotonated by g-phosphate.

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NMP kinases are a family of enzymes containing P-loop structures

-Comparison of NMP kinase structures reveals that these enzymes

form a family of homologous proteins.

-The nucleoside triphosphate binding domain is a common feature

in these homologous nucleotide kinases and others.

Core domain

Page 69: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Core domain of NMP kinases

-Consist of a central β sheet, surrounded on both sides by α helices.

-P loop : between the first β strand and the first α helix. Seq. : Gly-X-X-X-X-Gly-Lys Interact with NTP

Page 70: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

- P loop interact with ATP

Phosphate

Page 71: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

Magnesium or manganese complexes of nucleoside triphosphates are the true substrates for essentially all NTP-dependent enzymes.

-NMP kinases are essentially inactive in the absence of metal ions

(Mg2+, Mn2+).

-Nucleotides bind these ions, and it is the metal ion-nucleotide

complex that is the true substrate for the enzymes.

-Kd of ATP-Mg2+ complex ~0.1mM, Mg2+ conc in cytosol is mM

range. So?

Page 72: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

-Magnesium ion is bound to the β and γ phosphoryl groups and to four water molecules at the remaining coordination position.

→ The magnesium ion provides additional points of interaction between the ATP-Mg2+ complex and the enzyme, thus increasing the binding energy; coordinated to six groups in an octahedral arrangement.-Mg2+ binding hold the nucleotide in a well-defined conformation that can be bound by an enzyme.

Page 73: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

ATP binding induces large conformational changes

→ Substrate binding induces large structural changes in the kinase ; prototype of induced fit

-P loop closes down on top of the polyphosphate chain -This bring down the lid domain to bind to the nucleotide.

Page 74: Chapter 9 Catalytic Strategies

P-loop NTPase domains are present in a range of important proteins.

ATP synthase, myosin, G proteins, helicase and elongation factor Tu contain P loop NTPase domain.Similar structure.