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Query: EC:2.3.3.1 (
citrate synthase
)
4,488
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acetyl-CoA
enol has been proposed as an intermediate in the
citrate synthase
(CS) reaction with Asp375 acting as a base, removing a proton from the methyl carbon of
acetyl-CoA
, and His274 acting as an acid, donating a proton to the carbonyl [Karpusas, M., Branchaud, B., & Remington, S.J. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2213]. CS-oxaloacetate (OAA) complexes with the transition-state analog inhibitor, carboxymethyl-CoA (CMCoA), mimic those with
acetyl-CoA
enol. Asp375 and His274 interact intimately with the carboxyl of the bound inhibitor. While enzymes in which these residues have been changed to other amino acids have very low catalytic activity, we find that they retain their ability to form complexes with substrates and the transition-state analog inhibitor. In comparison with the value of the chemical shift of the protonated CMCoA carboxyl in acidic aqueous solutions or its value in the wild-type ternary complex, the values in the Asp375 mutants are unusually low. Model studies suggest that these low values result from complete absence of one hydrogen bond partner for the Gly mutant and distortions in the active site hydrogen bond systems for the Glu mutant. The high affinity of Asp375Gly-OAA for CMCoA suggests that the unfavorable proton uptake required to stabilize the CMCoA-OAA ternary complex of the wild-type enzyme [Kurz, L.C., Shah, S., Crane, B.R., Donald, L.J., Duckworth, H.W., & Drysdale, G.R. (1992) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)] is not required by this mutant; the needed proton is most likely provided by His274. This supports the proposed role of His274 as a general acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Catalytic strategy of citrate synthase: effects of amino acid changes in the acetyl-CoA binding site on transition-state analog inhibitor complexes. 132 23
1. Limited proteolysis of
citrate synthase
from Sulfolobus solfataricus by trypsin reduced the rate of the overall reaction (
acetyl-CoA
+ oxaloacetate + H2O----citrate + CoASH) to 4% but did not affect the hydrolysis of citryl-CoA. Experimental results indicate that a connecting link between the enzyme's ligase and hydrolase activity becomes impaired specifically on treatment with trypsin. Other proteolytic enzymes like chymotrypsin and subtilisin inactivated catalytic functions of
citrate synthase
, ligase and hydrolase, equally well. 2. Tryptic hydrolysis occurs at the N-terminal region of
citrate synthase
, but a study by SDS/PAGE revealed no difference in molecular mass between native and proteolytically nicked
citrate synthase
. The peptide removed from the enzyme by trypsin, therefore, contains less than about 15 amino acid residues. 3. The Km values of the substrates for both native and nicked enzyme were identical, as was the state of aggregation (dimeric) of the two enzyme species. These could be separated by affinity chromatography on Blue-Sepharose and differentiated by their isoelectric points (pI = 6.68 +/- 0.08 and pI = 6.37 +/- 0.03 for native
citrate synthase
and the large tryptic peptide, respectively) as well as by the N-terminus which is blocked in the native enzyme only. 4. Edman degradation of the large tryptic fragment yielded the N-terminal sequence GLEDVYIKSTSLTYIDGVNGVLRY, which is 71% identical to the N-terminal region (positions 9-32) of
citrate synthase
from Thermoplasma acidophilum. 5. The conversion of
citrate synthase
into essentially a citryl-CoA hydrolase is considered the consequence of a conformational change thought to occur on tryptic removal of the N-terminal small peptide.
...
PMID:Conversion, by limited proteolysis, of an archaebacterial citrate synthase into essentially a citryl-CoA hydrolase. 152 37
beta-Ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase III catalyzes the condensation of
acetyl-CoA
with malonyl-ACP in dissociated (Type II) fatty acid synthase systems. A synthase III mutant was used to localize the structural gene to the 24.5-min region of the Escherichia coli chromosome, and the defective synthase III allele was designated fabH1. The fabH gene was identified on a 1.3-kilobase NruI-HindIII chromosomal DNA fragment (plasmid pWO114) that complemented the enzymatic defect in fabH1 strains. The NruI-HindIII fragment was sequenced and contained a single open reading frame predicted to encode a 33,517-dalton protein with an isoelectric point of 4.85. The fabH sequence contained an Ala-Cys-Ala tripeptide characteristic of
condensing enzyme
active sites. A T7 expression system showed that the NruI-HindIII fragment directed the synthesis of a single 34,800-dalton protein. This protein was purified and the order of the amino-terminal 30 residues of the protein corresponded exactly to the amino acid structure predicted from the DNA sequence. The purified protein possessed both acetoacetyl-ACP synthase and
acetyl-CoA
:ACP transacylase activities, and cells harboring plasmid pWO114 overproduced the two activities, supporting the conclusion that a single protein carries out both reactions. Overproduction of synthase III resulted in a significant increase in shorter-chain fatty acids in the membrane phospholipids. These catalytic properties are consistent with the proposed role of synthase III in the initiation of fatty acid synthesis.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of the beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase III gene (fabH) from Escherichia coli K-12. 155 88
The possible involvement of arginyl and lysyl side chains of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) in binding coenzyme A (CoA) was studied by means of chemical modification, site-directed mutagenesis, variation in ionic strength, use of competitive inhibitors or substrate analogues, and X-ray crystallography. Unlike a number of enzymes, including
citrate synthase
, CAT does not employ specific ion pairs with the phosphoanionic centers of CoA to bind the acetyl donor, and arginyl residues play no role in recognition of the coenzyme. Although phenylglyoxal inactivates CAT reversibly, it does so by the formation of an unstable adduct with a thiol group, that of Cys-31 in the chloramphenicol binding site. The inhibitory effect of increasing ionic strength on kcat/Km(
acetyl-CoA
) can be explained by long-range electrostatic interactions between CoA and the epsilon-amino groups of Lys-54 and Lys-177, both of which are solvent-accessible. The epsilon-amino group of Lys-54 contributes 1.3 kcal.mol-1 to the binding of
acetyl-CoA
via interactions with both the 3'- and 5'-phosphoanions of CoA. Lys-177 contributes only 0.4 kcal.mol-1 to the productive binding of
acetyl-CoA
, mediated by long-range (approximately 14 A) interactions with the 5'-alpha- and -beta-phosphoanions of CoA. The combined energetic contribution of Lys-54 and Lys-177 to
acetyl-CoA
binding (1.7 kcal.mol-1) is less than that previously demonstrated (2.4 kcal.mol-1) for a simple hydrophobic interaction between Tyr-178 and the adenine ring of CoA (Day & Shaw, 1992).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acetyl coenzyme A binding by chloramphenicol acetyltransferase: long-range electrostatic determinants of coenzyme A recognition. 156 67
The propionyl-CoA
condensing enzyme
which catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of 2-methylbutyrate and 2-methylvalerate by Ascaris muscle appears to exist in at least three forms in the mitochondria of this parasitic nematode. Two forms, A and B, were separated by ion exchange chromatography on CM-Sephadex. Chromatography on phosphocellulose resulted in the recovery of one minor peak (I) and two major peaks with activity (II and III). A and B as well as I, II, and III differed in their specific activities. Forms B and III were the most retained by their resins, and were the most active forms of the enzyme in each case. Inhibition studies with metabolites from Ascaris mitochondria indicate that CoASH, a product of the condensation reaction, and
acetyl-CoA
are effective inhibitors of the condensing and thiolytic activities of the Ascaris enzyme, respectively. Incubation of the active enzyme form B for 2 h with 0.1 mM CoASH at room temperature under nitrogen caused the loss of 92% of the propionyl-CoA condensing activity and 67% of the thiolase activity when assayed in standard mixtures. The propionyl-CoA
condensing enzyme
exhibited a hyperbolic dependence of the condensation velocity to changes in substrate concentration. However, in the presence of CoASH the Michaelis-Menten kinetics was transformed into a sigmoidal kinetics indicating a deviation from a simple product inhibition. Inactivation of the most active forms of the enzyme with CoASH was accompanied by (a) a change in the chemical reactivity of the protein toward p-chloromurcuribenzoate, (b) a change in the uv-visible spectrum of the protein, and (c) a change in the elution patterns from both CM-Sephadex and phosphocellulose column chromatography, where-upon one, two, or more protein peaks were obtained. The several protein peaks resolved by rechromatography of the [14C]CoASH-inactivated enzyme III on phosphocellulose had different CoASH contents. The elution positions were correlated with the less active forms (I and II) having increased [14C]CoASH activities. Similarly, the two peaks isolated upon rechromatography of the CoASH-partially inactivated enzyme B on CM-Sephadex had different isotope contents and the elution position of enzyme A corresponded to the less active form. The results described indicate that the CoASH modification of Ascaris propionyl-CoA
condensing enzyme
may be responsible for the existence of several forms of the enzyme and might represent a mode of control by chemically modulating the amount of the active forms of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Propionyl-CoA condensing enzyme from Ascaris muscle mitochondria. II. Coenzyme A modulation. 167 27
Substrate and intermediate analogue inhibitors of enzymes were prepared in which the thioester oxygen of acyl-CoA substrates is replaced by hydrogen with formation of CoA-thioethers. Experiments performed with ATP citrate lyase and S-(3,4-dicarboxy-3-hydroxybutyl)-CoA are consistent with citryl-CoA but not with citryl-enzyme being the direct precursor of the products
acetyl-CoA
and oxaloacetate. Consistent with these results, a previously described isotopic exchange between
acetyl-CoA
and [3H]CoASH, indicating the formation of an acetyl-enzyme in the reaction pathway, could not be confirmed. Substrate analogue CoA-thioethers of malate synthase are inhibitors endowed with the affinity of the substrates. Acetyl carboxylase and fatty acid synthetase are not inhibited by the substrate analogue S-ethyl-CoA; S-carboxyethyl-CoA, which could substitute for malonyl-CoA, is likewise not inhibitory. An explanation is proposed. Previously suggested roles of S-carboxymethyl-CoA, an
acetyl-CoA
-related inhibitor of
citrate synthase
, are discussed in the light of new experimental data. S-Acetyl, S-propionyl and S-carboxymethyl derivatives of 1,N6-etheno-CoA loose the high affinity of their CoA-counterparts to
citrate synthase
, probably because the ethylene group prevents proper binding to the enzyme.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of metabolic reactions. Scope and limitation of acyl-CoA-analogue CoA-thioethers. 167 5
We describe a mutant of Escherichia coli
citrate synthase
, CS R319L, in which the arginine residue at position 319 of the sequence has been replaced by leucine. In this mutant, saturation by the substrate
acetyl-CoA
is changed from sigmoid (Hill parameter = 1.75 +/- 0.2) to hyperbolic (Hill parameter = 1.0 +/- 0.1) and dependence on the activator KCl is greatly reduced. Further mutations at this site and at position 343 (which model building predicts is close enough to allow a side-chain interaction with position 319) are also described. In the wild-type enzyme, the model suggests the possibility of a salt-bridge interaction between Arg-319 (located on the P helix in the small domain) and Glu-343 (in the Q helix in the same domain), but mutation of Glu-343 to Ala (CS E343A) produced a much smaller difference in the kinetic properties than the ARg-319 to Leu mutation did. Small changes in kinetic properties were also obtained with an Arg-319----Glu (CS R319E) mutation. In CS R319L, oxaloacetate, the first substrate to bind, induces an ultraviolet difference spectrum which is obtained with wild-type enzyme only in the presence of KCl. To account for these observations we postulate that wild-type E. coli
citrate synthase
exists in two conformational states, T and R, which are equilibrium; T state binds NADH, the allosteric inhibitor, while R state binds substrates and can be converted to another substrate-binding state, R', by KCl.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A mutant of Escherichia coli citrate synthase that affects the allosteric equilibrium. 167 60
We propose an experimental approach combining 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR spectroscopy to investigate metabolite flux in cells under physiological conditions and present a mathematical model giving the relationships between the following different parameters. 13C fractional enrichment, fluxes in competing pathways, metabolite concentration and experimental time. This model has been used for determining the absolute and/or relative values of five fluxes involving pyruvate, ethanol,
acetyl-CoA
and glutamate via the Krebs cycle in glucose-grown repressed Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells fed with [1-13C]glucose and/or unlabeled ethanol. The glucose consumption and the production of various compounds such as ethanol, glycerol, trehalose etc. were studied qualitatively and/or quantitatively as a function of time. The 13C fractional enrichment of [2-13C]ethanol was determined by observing the proton resonance of the methyl group. Addition of 25 mM unlabeled ethanol shows no significant effect on the glucose consumption or the production of any metabolites. However unlabeled ethanol exerts a strong influence on the enrichment of glutamate C4, but only induces an insignificant change on glutamate C2 and C3. Apart from the fact that ethanol is a potential precursor of
acetyl-CoA
as expected, these results indicate that (a) the probability for citrate and 2-oxoglutarate to make one turn or more in the Krebs cycle is negligible and (b) the scrambling between C4 and C3 via the glyoxylate shunt is virtually absent. The flux of ethanol formation from pyruvate is about three-times and nine-times greater than that of ethanol consumption and
acetyl-CoA
formation, respectively, from pyruvate via pyruvate dehydrogenase. Without addition of unlabeled ethanol, the ratio of the integrated resonance of glutamate (C2 + C3)/C4 reflecting the activity of pyruvate carboxylase relative to that of
citrate synthase
, is about 1.1. By comparing the absolute values of the different fluxes, it was found that 88% of the glucose was used to synthetize ethanol but the observed concentration of ethanol in the supernatant represents only 58% of the glucose consumption. The validity of the present model was supported by the data obtained from similar experiments using unlabeled ethanol and non-NMR techniques.
...
PMID:Determination of flux through different metabolite pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR spectroscopy. 168 49
The active-site aspartic acid residue, Asp-362, of Escherichia coli
citrate synthase
was changed by site-directed mutagenesis to Glu-362, Asn-362 or Gly-362. Only very low catalytic activity could be detected with the Asp----Asn and Asp----Gly mutations. The Asp----Glu mutation produced an enzyme that expressed about 0.8% of the overall catalytic rate, and the hydrolysis step in the reaction, monitored as citryl-CoA hydrolysis, was inhibited to a similar extent. However, the condensation reaction, measured in the reverse direction as citryl-CoA cleavage to oxaloacetate and
acetyl-CoA
, was not affected by the mutation, and this citryl-CoA lyase activity was the major catalytic activity of the mutant enzyme. This high condensation activity in an enzyme in which the subsequent hydrolysis step was about 98% inhibited permitted considerable exchange of the methyl protons of
acetyl-CoA
during catalysis by the mutant enzyme. The Km for oxaloacetate was not significantly altered in the D362E mutant enzyme, whereas the Km for
acetyl-CoA
was about 5 times lower. A mechanism is proposed in which Asp-362 is involved in the hydrolysis reaction of this enzyme, and not as a base in the deprotonation of
acetyl-CoA
as recently suggested by others. [Karpusas, Branchaud & Remington (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2213-2219; Alter, Casazza, Zhi, Nemeth, Srere & Evans, (1990) Biochemistry 29, 7557-7563].
...
PMID:Conversion of citrate synthase into citryl-CoA lyase as a result of mutation of the active-site aspartic acid residue to glutamic acid. 168 5
Two amino acid residues, His274 and Asp375, were replaced singly in the active site of pig
citrate synthase
(PCS) with Gly274, Arg274, Gly375, Asn375, Glu375, and Gln375. The nonmutant protein and the mutant proteins were expressed in and purified from Escherichia coli, and the effects of these amino acid substitutions on the overall reaction rate and conformation of the PCS protein were studied by initial velocity and full time course kinetic analysis, behavior during affinity column chromatography, and monoclonal antibody reactivity. Native and mutant proteins purified similarly had a subunit molecular weight of 50,000 and were homologous when examined with 10 independent a-PCS monoclonal IgGs or with a polyclonal anti-PHCS serum. No activity was detected for Asn375 or Gln375. The kcats of the other purified mutant proteins, however, were decreased by about 10(3) compared to the nonmutant enzyme activity. The Km for oxalacetate was decreased 10-fold in the Glu375 protein and was reduced by half in Gly274 and Arg274 PCSs, while the Km for
acetyl-CoA
was decreased 2-3-fold in Gly274, Arg274, and Gln375 PCSs. A mechanism is proposed that electrostatically links His274 and Asp375.
...
PMID:Mutation of essential catalytic residues in pig citrate synthase. 170 91
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