Publication | Closed Access
Direct evidence for the exploitation of an .alpha.-helix in the catalytic mechanism of triosephosphate isomerase
50
Citations
28
References
1993
Year
In previous work, we have shown that the first (and, presumably, the second) pKa of the active-site histidine-95 in triosephosphate isomerase has been lowered by about 2 units [Lodi, P. J., & Knowles, J. R. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 6948-6956]. One reason for the perturbed pKa of this residue appears to be its location at the N-terminus of a short alpha-helix that runs from residues 95 to 102. Fortuitously, the residue at the C-terminus of this helix is also a histidine residue (histidine-103), and the existence of a histidine side chain at each end has allowed us directly to implicate the helix in the perturbation of the pKa value of histidine-95. 15N NMR titration studies of the native enzyme and 13C NMR titration studies of the denatured enzyme show that while the pKa of histidine-95 is lowered by a least 2 units in the folded versus the unfolded state, the pKa of histidine-103 is raised by about 0.6 unit on protein folding. These complementary effects on the pKa values of histidine-95 and histidine-103 suggest that the alpha-helix is indeed responsible for the perturbation of the pKa values. The larger effect on the pKa of histidine-95 is readily rationalized in terms of the local structure of the enzyme. The disparity in the perturbation for the two histidine side chains illustrates how an alpha-helix can be functionally utilized by proteins, directly to affect (as in the present case) the chemistry of catalysis by an enzyme.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1