Price John C, Barr Eric W, Hoffart Lee M, Krebs Carsten, Bollinger J Martin
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA.
Biochemistry. 2005 Jun 7;44(22):8138-47. doi: 10.1021/bi050227c.
Recent studies on taurine:alpha-ketoglutarate dioxygenase (TauD) from Escherichia coli have provided evidence for a three-step, minimal kinetic mechanism involving the quaternary TauD.Fe(II).alpha-ketoglutarate.taurine complex, the taurine-hydroxylating Fe(IV)-oxo intermediate (J) that forms upon reaction of the quaternary complex with O(2), and a poorly defined, Fe(II)-containing intermediate state that converts in the rate-limiting step back to the quaternary complex [Price, J. C., Barr, E. W., Tirupati, B., Bollinger, J. M., Jr., and Krebs, C. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 7497-7508]. The mapping of this kinetic mechanism onto the consensus chemical mechanism for the Fe(II)- and alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent engendered several predictions and additional questions that have been experimentally addressed in the present study. The results demonstrate (1) that postulated intermediates between the quaternary complex and J accumulate very little or not at all; (2) that decarboxylation of alpha-ketoglutarate occurs prior to or concomitantly with formation of J; (3) that the second intermediate state comprises one or more product complex with Mossbauer features that are partially resolved from those of the binary TauD.Fe(II), ternary TauD.Fe(II).alpha-ketoglutarate, and quaternary TauD.Fe(II).alpha-ketoglutarate.taurine complexes; and (4) that the rate-determining step in the catalytic cycle is release of product(s) prior to the rapid, ordered binding of alpha-ketoglutarate and then taurine to regenerate the O(2)-reactive quaternary complex. The results thus integrate the previously proposed kinetic and chemical mechanisms and indicate which of the postulated intermediates in the latter will be detectable only upon perturbation of the kinetics by changes in reaction conditions (e.g., temperature), protein mutagenesis, the use of substrate analogues, or some combination of these.
α-酮戊二酸双加氧酶(TauD)的研究为一种三步、最小动力学机制提供了证据,该机制涉及四级TauD.Fe(II).α-酮戊二酸.牛磺酸复合物、在四级复合物与O(2)反应时形成的牛磺酸羟化Fe(IV)-氧中间体(J),以及一个定义不明确的、含Fe(II)的中间状态,该中间状态在限速步骤中转化回四级复合物[普赖斯,J.C.,巴尔,E.W.,蒂鲁帕蒂,B.,博林格,J.M.,Jr.,和克雷布斯,C.(2003年)《生物化学》42卷,7497 - 7508页]。将此动力学机制映射到依赖Fe(II)和α-酮戊二酸的共识化学机制上,产生了几个预测和其他问题,本研究已通过实验对这些问题进行了探讨。结果表明:(1)在四级复合物和J之间假定的中间体积累极少或根本不积累;(2)α-酮戊二酸的脱羧反应在J形成之前或与之同时发生;(3)第二个中间状态包含一种或多种产物复合物,其穆斯堡尔特征与二元TauD.Fe(II)、三元TauD.Fe(II).α-酮戊二酸和四级TauD.Fe(II).α-酮戊二酸.牛磺酸复合物的特征部分解析;(4)催化循环中的限速步骤是在α-酮戊二酸然后牛磺酸快速、有序结合以再生对O(2)有反应性的四级复合物之前产物的释放。因此,这些结果整合了先前提出的动力学和化学机制,并指出了后者中哪些假定的中间体仅在通过改变反应条件(如温度)、蛋白质诱变、使用底物类似物或这些因素的某种组合来扰动动力学时才能被检测到。