Affiliation:
1. Cambridge Centre for Molecular Recognition, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge CB2 1QW, U.K.
Abstract
In wild-type glutathione reductase from Escherichia coli residues Val421 and Ala422 are located in an alpha-helix in a densely packed and hydrophobic region of the dimer interface, with their side chains packed against those of residues Ala422′ and Val421′ in the second subunit. A series of mutant glutathione reductases was constructed in which the identities of the residues at positions 421 and 422 were changed. Mutations were designed so as to present like charges (mutants Val421-->Glu:Ala422-->Glu and Val421-->Lys:Ala422-->Lys) or opposite charges (mutant Val421-->Lys:Ala422-->Glu) across the dimer interface to assess the role of electrostatic interactions in dimer stability. A fourth mutant (Val421-->His:Ala422-->His) was also constructed to investigate the effects of introducing a potentially protonatable bulky side chain into a crowded region of the dimer interface. In all cases, an active dimeric enzyme was found to be assembled but each mutant protein was thermally destabilized. A detailed steady-state kinetic analysis indicated that each mutant enzyme no longer displayed the Ping Pong kinetic behaviour associated with the wild-type enzyme but exhibited what was best described as a random bireactant ternary complex mechanism. This leads, depending on the chosen substrate concentration, to apparent sigmoidal, hyperbolic or complex kinetic behaviour. These experiments, together with others reported previously, indicate that simple mutagenic changes in regions distant from the active site can lead to dramatic switches in steady-state kinetic mechanism.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
30 articles.
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