Back to Search Start Over

Beta D305A mutant of tryptophan synthase shows strongly perturbed allosteric regulation and substrate specificity.

Authors :
Ferrari D
Yang LH
Miles EW
Dunn MF
Source :
Biochemistry [Biochemistry] 2001 Jun 26; Vol. 40 (25), pp. 7421-32.
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

Substrate channeling in the tryptophan synthase bienzyme is regulated by allosteric interactions. Allosteric signals are transmitted via a scaffolding of structural elements that includes a monovalent cation-binding site and salt-bridging interactions between the side chains of betaAsp 305, betaArg 141, betaLys 167, and alphaAsp 56 that appear to modulate the interconversion between open and closed conformations. betaAsp 305 also interacts with the hydroxyl group of the substrate L-Ser in some structures. One possible functional role for betaAsp 305 is to ensure the allosteric transmission that triggers the switching of alphabeta-dimeric units between open and closed conformations of low and high activity. This work shows that substitution of betaAsp 305 with Ala (betaD305A) decreases the affinity of the beta-site for the substrate L-Ser, destabilizes the enzyme-bound alpha-aminoacrylate, E(A-A), and quinonoid species, E(Q), and changes the nucleophile specificity of the beta-reaction. The altered specificity provides a biosynthetic route for new L-amino acids derived from substrate analogues. betaD305A also shows an increased rate of formation of pyruvate upon reaction with L-Ser relative to the wild-type enzyme. The formation of pyruvate is strongly inhibited by the binding of benzimidazole to E(A-A). Upon reaction with L-Ser and in the presence of the alpha-site substrate analogue, alpha-glycerol phosphate, the Na(+) form of betaD305A undergoes inactivation via reaction of nascent alpha-aminoacrylate with bound PLP. This work establishes important roles for betaAsp 305 both in the conformational change between open and closed states that takes place at the beta-site during the formation of the E(A-A) and in substrate binding and recognition.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0006-2960
Volume :
40
Issue :
25
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11412095
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi002892l