Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.3.5.5 (CPS)
1,262 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from one molecule of bicarbonate, two molecules of Mg2+ATP and one molecule of glutamine or ammonia depending upon the particular form of the enzyme under investigation. As isolated from Escherichia coli, the enzyme is an alpha,beta-heterodimer consisting of a small subunit that hydrolyzes glutamine and a large subunit that catalyzes the two required phosphorylation events. Here the three-dimensional structure of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from E. coli refined to 2.1 A resolution with an R factor of 17.9% is described. The small subunit is distinctly bilobal with a catalytic triad (Cys269, His353 and Glu355) situated between the two structural domains. As observed in those enzymes belonging to the alpha/beta-hydrolase family, the active-site nucleophile, Cys269, is perched at the top of a tight turn. The large subunit consists of four structural units: the carboxyphosphate synthetic component, the oligomerization domain, the carbamoyl phosphate synthetic component and the allosteric domain. Both the carboxyphosphate and carbamoyl phosphate synthetic components bind Mn2+ADP. In the carboxyphosphate synthetic component, the two observed Mn2+ ions are both octahedrally coordinated by oxygen-containing ligands and are bridged by the carboxylate side chain of Glu299. Glu215 plays a key allosteric role by coordinating to the physiologically important potassium ion and hydrogen bonding to the ribose hydroxyl groups of ADP. In the carbamoyl phosphate synthetic component, the single observed Mn2+ ion is also octahedrally coordinated by oxygen-containing ligands and Glu761 plays a similar role to that of Glu215. The carboxyphosphate and carbamoyl phosphate synthetic components, while topologically equivalent, are structurally different, as would be expected in light of their separate biochemical functions.
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PMID:The structure of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase determined to 2.1 A resolution. 1008 90

The amidotransferase family of enzymes utilizes the ammonia derived from the hydrolysis of glutamine for a subsequent chemical reaction catalyzed by the same enzyme. The ammonia intermediate does not dissociate into solution during the chemical transformations. A well-characterized example of the structure and mechanism displayed by this class of enzymes is provided by carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS). Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase is isolated from Escherichia coli as a heterodimeric protein. The smaller of the two subunits catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine to glutamate and ammonia. The larger subunit catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate using 2 mol of ATP, bicarbonate, and ammonia. Kinetic investigations have led to a proposed chemical mechanism for this enzyme that requires carboxy phosphate, ammonia, and carbamate as kinetically competent reaction intermediates. The three-dimensional X-ray crystal structure of CPS has localized the positions of three active sites. The nucleotide binding site within the N-terminal half of the large subunit is required for the phosphorylation of bicarbonate and subsequent formation of carbamate. The nucleotide binding site within the C-terminal domain of the large subunit catalyzes the phosphorylation of carbamate to the final product, carbamoyl phosphate. The three active sites within the heterodimeric protein are separated from one another by about 45 A. The ammonia produced within the active site of the small subunit is the substrate for reaction with the carboxy phosphate intermediate that is formed in the active site found within the N-terminal half of the large subunit of CPS. Since the ammonia does not dissociate from the protein prior to its reaction with carboxy phosphate, this intermediate must therefore diffuse through a molecular tunnel that connects these two sites with one another. Similarly, the carbamate intermediate, initially formed at the active site within the N-terminal half of the large subunit, is the substrate for phosphorylation by the ATP bound to the active site located in the C-terminal half of the large subunit. A molecular passageway has been identified by crystallographic methods that apparently facilitates diffusion between these two active sites within the large subunit of CPS. Synchronization of the chemical transformations is controlled by structural perturbations among the three active sites. Molecular tunnels between distant active sites have also been identified in tryptophan synthase and glutamine phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate amidotransferase and are likely architectural features in an expanding list of enzymes.
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PMID:The amidotransferase family of enzymes: molecular machines for the production and delivery of ammonia. 1038 30

Mammalian carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase is part of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase-aspartate carbamoyltransferase-dihydroorotase (CAD), a multifunctional protein that also catalyzes the second and third steps of pyrimidine biosynthesis. Carbamoyl phosphate synthesis requires the concerted action of the glutaminase (GLN) and carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase domains of CAD. There is a functional linkage between these domains such that glutamine hydrolysis on the GLN domain does not occur at a significant rate unless ATP and HCO(3)(-), the other substrates needed for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis, bind to the synthetase domain. The GLN domain consists of catalytic and attenuation subdomains. In the separately cloned GLN domain, the catalytic subdomain is down-regulated by interactions with the attenuation domain, a process thought to be part of the functional linkage. Replacement of Ser(44) in the GLN attenuation domain with alanine increases the k(cat)/K(m) for glutamine hydrolysis 680-fold. The formation of a functional hybrid between the mammalian Ser(44) GLN domain and the Escherichia coli carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase large subunit had little effect on glutamine hydrolysis. In contrast, ATP and HCO(3)(-) did not stimulate the glutaminase activity, indicating that the interdomain linkage had been disrupted. In accord with this interpretation, the rate of glutamine hydrolysis and carbamoyl phosphate synthesis were no longer coordinated. Approximately 3 times more glutamine was hydrolyzed by the Ser(44) --> Ala mutant than that needed for carbamoyl phosphate synthesis. Ser(44), the only attenuation subdomain residue that extends into the GLN active site, appears to be an integral component of the regulatory circuit that phases glutamine hydrolysis and carbamoyl phosphate synthesis.
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PMID:Functional linkage between the glutaminase and synthetase domains of carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase. Role of serine 44 in carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase-aspartate carbamoyltransferase-dihydroorotase (cad). 1049 79

The heterodimeric carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from bicarbonate, glutamine, and two molecules of ATP. The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine within the small amidotransferase subunit and then transfers ammonia to the two active sites within the large subunit. These three active sites are connected via an intermolecular tunnel, which has been located within the X-ray crystal structure of CPS from E. coli. It has been proposed that the ammonia intermediate diffuses through this molecular tunnel from the binding site for glutamine within the small subunit to the phosphorylation site for bicarbonate within the large subunit. To provide experimental support for the functional significance of this molecular tunnel, residues that define the interior walls of the "ammonia tunnel" within the small subunit were targeted for site-directed mutagenesis. These structural modifications were intended to either block or impede the passage of ammonia toward the large subunit. Two mutant proteins (G359Y and G359F) display kinetic properties consistent with a constriction or blockage of the ammonia tunnel. With both mutants, the glutaminase and bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reactions have become uncoupled from one another. However, these mutant enzymes are fully functional when external ammonia is utilized as the nitrogen source but are unable to use glutamine for the synthesis of carbamoyl-P. These results suggest the existence of an alternate route to the bicarbonate phosphorylation site when ammonia is provided as an external nitrogen source.
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PMID:An engineered blockage within the ammonia tunnel of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase prevents the use of glutamine as a substrate but not ammonia. 1072 15

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from E. coli catalyzes the synthesis of carbamoyl phosphate through a series of four reactions occurring at three active sites connected by a molecular tunnel of 100 A. To understand the mechanism for coordination and synchronization among the active sites, the pre-steady-state time courses for the formation of phosphate, ADP, glutamate, and carbamoyl phosphate were determined. When bicarbonate and ATP were rapidly mixed with CPS, a stoichiometric burst of acid-labile phosphate and ADP was observed with a formation rate constant of 1100 min(-)(1). The burst phase was followed by a linear steady-state phase with a rate constant of 12 min(-)(1). When glutamine or ammonia was added to the initial reaction mixture, the magnitude and the rate of formation of the burst phase for either phosphate or ADP were unchanged, but the rate constant for the linear steady-state phase increased to an average value of 78 min(-)(1). These results demonstrate that the initial phosphorylation of bicarbonate is independent of the binding or hydrolysis of glutamine. The pre-steady-state time course for the hydrolysis of glutamine in the absence of ATP exhibited a burst of glutamate formation with a rate constant of 4 min(-)(1) when the reaction was quenched with base. In the presence of ATP and bicarbonate, the rate constant for the formation of the burst of glutamate was 1100 min(-)(1). The hydrolysis of ATP thus enhanced the hydrolysis of glutamine by a factor of 275, but there was no effect by glutamine on the initial phosphorylation of bicarbonate. The pre-steady-state time course for the formation of carbamoyl phosphate was linear with an overall rate constant of 72 min(-)(1). The absence of an initial burst of carbamoyl phosphate formation eliminates product release as a rate-determining step for CPS. Overall, these results have been interpreted to be consistent with a mechanism whereby the phosphorylation of bicarbonate serves as the initial trigger for the rest of the reaction cascade. The formation of the carboxy phosphate intermediate within the large subunit must induce a conformational change to the active site of the small subunit that enhances the hydrolysis of glutamine. Thus, ammonia is not released into the molecular tunnel until the activated bicarbonate is ready to form carbamate. The rate-limiting step for the steady-state assembly of carbamoyl phosphate is either the formation, migration, or phosphorylation of the carbamate intermediate.
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PMID:Synchronization of the three reaction centers within carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 1081 70

Carbamoyl phosphate (CP), the essential precursor of pyrimidines and arginine, is made in Escherichia coli by a single carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) consisting of 41.4 and 117.7 kDa subunits, which is feed-back inhibited by UMP and activated by IMP and ornithine. The large subunit catalyzes CP synthesis from ammonia in three steps, and binds the effectors in its 15 kDa C-terminal domain. Fifteen site-directed mutations were introduced in 13 residues of this domain to investigate the mechanism of allosteric modulation by UMP and IMP. Two mutations, K993A and V994A, decreased significantly or abolished enzyme activity, apparently by interfering with the step of carbamate synthesis, and one mutation, T974A, negatively affected ornithine activation. S948A, K954A, T974A, K993A and K993W/H995A abolished or greatly hampered IMP activation and UMP inhibition as well as the binding of both effectors, monitored using photoaffinity labeling and ultracentrifugation binding assays. V994A also decreased significantly IMP and UMP binding. L990A, V991A, H995A, G997A and G1008A had more modest effects or affected more the modulation by and the binding of one than of the other nucleotide. K993W, R1020A, R1021A and K1061A were without substantial effects. The results confirm the independence of the regulatory and catalytic centers, and also confirm functional predictions based on the X-ray structure of an IMP-CPS complex. They prove that the inhibitor UMP and the activator IMP bind in the same site, and exclude that the previously observed binding of ornithine and glutamine in this site were relevant for enzyme activation. K993 and V994 appear to be involved in the transmission of the regulatory signals triggered by UMP and IMP binding. These effectors possibly change the position of K993 and V994, and alter the intermolecular contacts mediated by the regulatory domain.
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the regulatory domain of Escherichia coli carbamoyl phosphate synthetase identifies crucial residues for allosteric regulation and for transduction of the regulatory signals. 1084 52

Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from bicarbonate, glutamine, and two molecules of ATP. The enzyme consists of a large synthetase subunit and a small amidotransferase subunit. The small subunit is structurally bilobal. The N-terminal domain is unique compared to the sequences of other known proteins. The C-terminal domain, which contains the direct catalytic residues for the amidotransferase activity of CPS, is homologous to other members of the Triad glutamine amidotransferases. The two domains are linked by a hinge-like loop, which contains a type II beta turn. The role of this loop in the hydrolysis of glutamine and the formation of carbamoyl phosphate was probed by site-directed mutagenesis. Based upon the observed kinetic properties of the mutants, the modifications to the small subunit can be separated into two groups. The first group consists of G152I, G155I, and Delta155. Attempts to disrupt the turn conformation were made by the deletion of Gly-155 or substitution of the two glycine residues with isoleucine. However, these mutations only have minor effects on the kinetic properties of the enzyme. The second group includes L153W, L153G/N154G, and a ternary complex consisting of the intact large subunit plus the separate N- and C-terminal domains of the small subunit. Although the ability to synthesize carbamoyl phosphate is retained in these enzymes, the hydrolysis of glutamine is partially uncoupled from the synthetase reaction. It is concluded that the hinge loop, but not the type-II turn structure of the loop per se, is important for maintaining the proper interface interactions between the two subunits and the catalytic coupling of the partial reactions occurring within the separate subunits of CPS.
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PMID:Role of the hinge loop linking the N- and C-terminal domains of the amidotransferase subunit of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 1090 Jan 47

Citrulline synthesis from glutamine is enhanced remarkably in enterocytes of weanling pigs, but the molecular mechanism(s) involved are not known. The objective of this study was to determine whether a cortisol surge mediates the enhanced expression of intestinal citrulline-synthetic enzymes during weaning. Jejunal enterocytes were prepared from 29-d-old weanling pigs treated with or without metyrapone (an inhibitor of cortisol synthesis), or from age-matched unweaned pigs. The mRNA levels and activities of phosphate-dependent glutaminase (PDG), pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase (P5CS), ornithine aminotransferase (OAT), carbamoyl-phosphate synthase I (CPS-I) and ornithine carbamoyltransferase (OCT) were determined. The mRNA levels for PDG, P5CS, OAT and OCT were 139, 157, 102 and 55% higher, respectively, in weanling pigs compared with suckling pigs. The activities of PDG and P5CS were 38 and 692% higher, respectively, in weanling pigs compared with unweaned pigs, but the activities of OAT, CPS-I and OCT did not differ between these two groups of pigs. The effects of metyrapone administration to weanling pigs were as follows: 1) prevention of a cortisol surge, 2) abolition of the increases in both mRNA levels and activity of P5CS, 3) no alteration in the mRNA levels and activities of PDG and CPS-I, 4) increases in the mRNA levels for OAT (216%) and OCT (39%) and in OAT activity (30%), and 5) prevention of the increase in intestinal synthesis of citrulline from glutamine. These results suggest that increased P5CS activity reflects in large part the increased levels of P5CS mRNA and is responsible for the increased synthesis of citrulline from glutamine in enterocytes of weanling pigs; these increases may be mediated by a cortisol surge during weaning that can be blocked by metyrapone administration.
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PMID:A cortisol surge mediates the enhanced expression of pig intestinal pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase during weaning. 1091 30

The x-ray crystal structure of the heterodimeric carbamoyl phosphate synthetase from Escherichia coli has identified an intermolecular tunnel that connects the glutamine binding site within the small amidotransferase subunit to the two phosphorylation sites within the large synthetase subunit. The tunneling of the ammonia intermediate through the interior of the protein has been proposed as a mechanism for the delivery of the ammonia from the small subunit to the large subunit. A series of mutants created within the ammonia tunnel were prepared by the placement of a constriction via site-directed mutagenesis. The degree of constriction within the ammonia tunnel of these enzymes was found to correlate to the extent of the uncoupling of the partial reactions, the diminution of carbamoyl phosphate formation, and the percentage of the internally derived ammonia that is channeled through the ammonia tunnel. NMR spectroscopy and a radiolabeled probe were used to detect and identify the enzymatic synthesis of N-amino carbamoyl phosphate and N-hydroxy carbamoyl phosphate from hydroxylamine and hydrazine. The kinetic results indicate that hydroxylamine, derived from the hydrolysis of gamma-glutamyl hydroxamate, is channeled through the ammonia tunnel to the large subunit. Discrimination between the passage of ammonia and hydroxylamine was observed among some of these tunnel-impaired enzymes. The overall results provide biochemical evidence for the tunneling of ammonia within the native carbamoyl phosphate synthetase.
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PMID:Restricted passage of reaction intermediates through the ammonia tunnel of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase. 1095 Sep 66

Acivicin [(alphaS,5S)-alpha-amino-3-chloro-4,5-dihydro-5-isoxazoleacetic acid] was investigated as an inhibitor of the triad glutamine amidotransferases, IGP synthase and GMP synthetase. Nucleophilic substitution of the chlorine atom in acivicin results in the formation of an imine-thioether adduct at the active site cysteine. Cys 77 was identified as the site of modification in the heterodimeric IGPS from Escherichia coli (HisHF) by tryptic digest and FABMS. Distinctions in the glutaminase domains of IGPS from E. coli, the bifunctional protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (HIS7), and E. coli GMPS were revealed by the differential rates of inactivation. While the ammonia-dependent turnover was unaffected by acivicin, the glutamine-dependent reaction was inhibited with unit stoichiometry. In analogy to the conditional glutaminase activity seen in IGPS and GMPS, the rates of inactivation were accelerated > or =25-fold when a nucleotide substrate (or analogue) was present. The specificity (k(inact)/K(i)app) for acivicin is on the same order of magnitude as the natural substrate glutamine in all three enzymes. The (alphaS,5R) diastereomer of acivicin was tested under identical conditions as acivicin and showed little inhibitory effect on the enzymes indicating that acivicin binds in the glutamine reactive site in a specific conformation. The data indicate that acivicin undergoes a glutamine amidotransferase mechanism-based covalent bond formation in the presence of nucleotide substrates or products. Acivicin and its (alphaS,5R) diastereomer were modeled in the glutaminase active site of GMPS and CPS to confirm that the binding orientation of the dihydroisoxazole ring is identical in all three triad glutamine amidotransferases. Stabilization of the imine-thioether intermediate by the oxyanion hole in triad glutamine amidotransferases appears to confer the high degree of specificity for acivicin inhibition and relates to a common mechanism for inactivation.
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PMID:Mechanism for acivicin inactivation of triad glutamine amidotransferases. 1117 Apr 8


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