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Rate-determining steps for tyrosine phosphorylation by the kinase domain of v-fps.
- Source :
-
Biochemistry [Biochemistry] 1996 Feb 06; Vol. 35 (5), pp. 1533-9. - Publication Year :
- 1996
-
Abstract
- The rate-determining steps in the phosphorylation of four tyrosine-containing peptides by the kinase domain of the nonreceptor tyrosine protein kinase v-fps were measured using viscosometric methods. The peptides were phosphorylated by a fusion protein of glutathione-S-transferase and the kinase domain of v-fps (GST-kin) and the initial velocities were determined by a coupled enzyme assay. Peptides I (EEEIYEEIE), II (EAEIYEAIE), and III (DADIYDAID) were phosphorylated by GST-kin with similar kinetic constants. The viscosogens, glycerol and sucrose, were found to have intermediate effects on kcat and no effect on kcat/Kpeptide for the phosphorylation of these three peptides. The data are interpreted according to the Stokes-Einstein equation and a simple three-step mechanism involving substrate binding, phosphoryl group transfer, and net product release. Two competitive inhibitors (EAEIFEAIE and DADIFDAID) exhibited K1 values that are 6-10-fold higher than the Kpeptide values for their analogous peptide substrates. The data imply that peptides I-III are in rapid equilibrium with the enzyme and that kcat is partially limited by both phosphoryl group transfer (40-100 s-1) and product release (17-22 s-1). GST-kin phosphorylates peptide IV (R5AENLEYamide) with a low Km (100 microM) and a kcat that is 40-fold lower than that for peptide I. No effect of solvent viscosity was observed for the phosphorylation of this peptide on either kcat or kcat/Kpeptide. This suggests that highly viscous solutions do not perturb structure and that the rate-determining step for this poor substrate is phosphoryl group transfer. The data indicate that the kinase domain of v-fps phosphorylates its best substrate with a chemical rate constant that is at least 5-fold lower than that for the serine-specific cAMP-dependent protein kinase and its best substrate LRRASLG (Adams & Taylor, 1992). Interestingly, both enzymes exhibit a similar affinity for their substrates and both enzymes release their products at a similar rate. This implies that the differences in catalytic efficiency between serine- and tyrosine-specific protein kinases lie exclusively in the rate constants for phosphoryl group transfer and not in substrate absorption or product desorption.
- Subjects :
- Amino Acid Sequence
Fusion Proteins, gag-onc genetics
Glutathione Transferase genetics
Kinetics
Models, Chemical
Molecular Sequence Data
Peptide Fragments genetics
Phosphorylation
Protein-Tyrosine Kinases genetics
Recombinant Fusion Proteins metabolism
Viscosity
Fusion Proteins, gag-onc metabolism
Oligopeptides metabolism
Peptide Fragments metabolism
Protein-Tyrosine Kinases metabolism
Tyrosine metabolism
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0006-2960
- Volume :
- 35
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Biochemistry
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 8634284
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi952435i