Murphy B P, Pratt R F
Department of Chemistry, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut 06457.
Biochemistry. 1991 Apr 16;30(15):3640-9. doi: 10.1021/bi00229a008.
Certain acyclic depsipeptides, but not peptides, are substrates of typical beta-lactamases [Pratt, R.F., & Govardhan, C.P. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 81, 1302]. This may reflect either the greater chemical reactivity of depsipeptides (and of beta-lactams, the natural substrates) than peptides or the greater ease of distortion of the depsipeptide (ester) than the peptide (amide) group into a penicillin-like conformation. The latter explanation has been shown to be more likely by employment of a novel beta-lactamase substrate. N-(phenylacetyl)glycyl-D-aziridine-2-carboxylate, which combines a high chemical reactivity with a close to tetrahedral amide nitrogen atom. Although this substrate was better (higher kcat/KM) than a comparable depsipeptide for beta-lactamases, it was poorer than the depsipeptide for the Streptomyces R61 D-alanyl-D-alanine peptidase (which catalyzes specific peptide hydrolysis). It therefore seems likely that one vital feature of the putative evolution of a DD-peptidase into a beta-lactamase would have been modification of the active site to, on one hand, accommodate bicyclic beta-lactams and, on the other, exclude productive binding of planar acyclic amides. Certain serine beta-lactamases and the R61 DD-peptidase also catalyze methanolysis and aminolysis by D-phenylalanine of the N-acylaziridine. The latter reaction, the first amide aminolysis shown to be catalyzed by a beta-lactamase, is a very close analogue of the transpeptidase reaction of DD-peptidases. The methanolysis reaction appeared to proceed by way of the same acyl-enzyme intermediate as formed from depsipeptides possessing the same acyl moiety as the aziridine. The kinetics of methanolysis were employed to determine whether acylation or deacylation was rate limiting to the hydrolysis reaction under saturating substrate concentrations. The kinetics of the aminolysis reaction, catalyzed by the Enterobacter cloacae P99 beta-lactamase, showed the characteristics of, and were interpreted in terms of, a sequential mechanism previously deduced for depsipeptides and this enzyme [Pazhanisamy, S., & Pratt, R. F. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6875-6882]. This mechanism features two separate binding sites, only one of which is productive. Strikingly, the binding of the N-acylaziridine to the nonproductive site was very tight, such that essentially all hydrolysis at substrate concentrations above 0.1Km proceeded via the ternary complex; this could also be true of penicillins.
某些无环缩肽而非肽是典型β-内酰胺酶的底物[普拉特,R.F.,& 戈瓦尔丹,C.P.(1984年)《美国国家科学院院刊》81卷,1302页]。这可能反映出缩肽(以及β-内酰胺,天然底物)比肽具有更高的化学反应活性,或者缩肽(酯)基团比肽(酰胺)基团更容易扭曲成青霉素样构象。通过使用一种新型β-内酰胺酶底物已表明后一种解释更有可能。N-(苯乙酰基)甘氨酰-D-氮杂环丙烷-2-羧酸酯,它兼具高化学反应活性和接近四面体的酰胺氮原子。尽管这种底物对β-内酰胺酶而言比类似的缩肽更好(kcat/KM更高),但对于链霉菌R61 D-丙氨酰-D-丙氨酸肽酶(催化特定肽水解)而言比缩肽差。因此,推测DD-肽酶进化为β-内酰胺酶的一个关键特征可能是活性位点的修饰,一方面要容纳双环β-内酰胺,另一方面要排除平面无环酰胺的有效结合。某些丝氨酸β-内酰胺酶和R61 DD-肽酶也催化N-酰基氮杂环丙烷的甲醇解和由D-苯丙氨酸催化的氨解。后一反应是首个显示由β-内酰胺酶催化的酰胺氨解反应,它与DD-肽酶的转肽反应非常相似。甲醇解反应似乎通过与由具有与氮杂环丙烷相同酰基部分的缩肽形成的相同酰基-酶中间体进行。在底物浓度饱和条件下,利用甲醇解动力学来确定酰化或脱酰化是否是水解反应的限速步骤。阴沟肠杆菌P99 β-内酰胺酶催化的氨解反应动力学显示出先前为缩肽和该酶推导的有序机制的特征并据此进行了解释[帕扎尼萨米,S.,& 普拉特,R.F.(1989年)《生物化学》28卷,6875 - 6882页]。该机制有两个独立的结合位点,其中只有一个是有效的。引人注目的是,N-酰基氮杂环丙烷与无效位点的结合非常紧密,以至于在底物浓度高于0.1Km时基本上所有水解都通过三元复合物进行;青霉素可能也是如此。