Patricelli M P, Lovato M A, Cravatt B F
The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, Department of Cell Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA.
Biochemistry. 1999 Aug 3;38(31):9804-12. doi: 10.1021/bi990637z.
Fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) is a membrane-bound enzyme responsible for the catabolism of neuromodulatory fatty acid amides, including anandamide and oleamide. FAAH's primary structure identifies this enzyme as a member of a diverse group of alkyl amidases, known collectively as the "amidase signature family". At present, this enzyme family's catalytic mechanism remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the catalytic features of FAAH through mutagenesis, affinity labeling, and steady-state kinetic methods. In particular, we focused on the respective roles of three serine residues that are conserved in all amidase signature enzymes (S217, S218, and S241 in FAAH). Mutation of each of these serines to alanine resulted in a FAAH enzyme bearing significant catalytic defects, with the S217A and S218A mutants showing 2300- and 95-fold reductions in k(cat), respectively, and the S241A mutant exhibiting no detectable catalytic activity. The double S217A:S218A FAAH mutant displayed a 230 000-fold decrease in k(cat), supporting independent catalytic functions for these serine residues. Affinity labeling of FAAH with a specific nucleophile reactive inhibitor, ethoxy oleoyl fluorophosphonate, identified S241 as the enzyme's catalytic nucleophile. The pH dependence of FAAH's k(cat) and k(cat)/K(m) implicated a base involved in catalysis with a pK(a) of 7.9. Interestingly, mutation of each of FAAH's conserved histidines (H184, H358, and H449) generated active enzymes, indicating that FAAH does not contain a Ser-His-Asp catalytic triad commonly found in other mammalian serine hydrolytic enzymes. The unusual properties of FAAH identified here suggest that this enzyme, and possibly the amidase signature family as a whole, may hydrolyze amides by a novel catalytic mechanism.
脂肪酸酰胺水解酶(FAAH)是一种膜结合酶,负责神经调节性脂肪酸酰胺的分解代谢,包括花生四烯乙醇胺和油酰胺。FAAH的一级结构表明该酶是多种烷基酰胺酶中的一员,这些酶统称为“酰胺酶特征家族”。目前,对这个酶家族的催化机制仍知之甚少。在本研究中,我们通过诱变、亲和标记和稳态动力学方法研究了FAAH的催化特性。特别地,我们重点关注了在所有酰胺酶特征酶中都保守的三个丝氨酸残基(FAAH中的S217、S218和S241)各自的作用。将这些丝氨酸中的每一个突变为丙氨酸都会导致FAAH酶出现显著的催化缺陷,其中S217A和S218A突变体的催化常数(k(cat))分别降低了2300倍和95倍,而S241A突变体则没有可检测到的催化活性。双突变体S217A:S218A的FAAH催化常数降低了230000倍,这支持了这些丝氨酸残基具有独立的催化功能。用一种特异性亲核反应抑制剂乙氧基油酰氟磷酸酯对FAAH进行亲和标记,确定S241为该酶的催化亲核试剂。FAAH的催化常数(k(cat))和催化常数与米氏常数的比值(k(cat)/K(m))对pH的依赖性表明,参与催化作用的碱的解离常数(pK(a))为7.9。有趣的是,FAAH中保守的组氨酸(H184、H358和H449)各自发生突变后均产生了有活性的酶,这表明FAAH不包含其他哺乳动物丝氨酸水解酶中常见的丝氨酸 - 组氨酸 - 天冬氨酸催化三联体。此处鉴定出的FAAH的异常特性表明,该酶乃至整个酰胺酶特征家族可能通过一种新的催化机制水解酰胺。