These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: The active-site arginine of S-adenosylmethionine synthetase orients the reaction intermediate. Author: Reczkowski RS, Taylor JC, Markham GD. Journal: Biochemistry; 1998 Sep 29; 37(39):13499-506. PubMed ID: 9753435. Abstract: S-Adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) synthetase catalyzes the formation of AdoMet and tripolyphosphate (PPPi) from ATP and L-methionine and the subsequent hydrolysis of the PPPi to PPi and Pi before product release. Little is known about the roles of active-site residues involved in catalysis of the two sequential reactions that occur at opposite ends of the polyphosphate chain. Crystallographic studies of Escherichia coli AdoMet synthetase showed that arginine-244 is the only arginine near the polyphosphate-binding site. Arginine-244 is embedded as the seventh residue in the conserved sequence DxGxTxxKxI which is also found at the active site of inorganic pyrophosphatases, suggesting a potential pyrophosphate-binding motif. Chemical modification of AdoMet synthetase by the arginine-specific reagents phenylglyoxal or p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal inactivates the enzyme. ATP and PPPi protect the enzyme from inactivation, consistent with the presence of an important arginine residue in the vicinity of the polyphosphate-binding site. Site-specific mutagenesis has been used to change the conserved arginine-244 to either leucine (R244L) or histidine (R244H). In the overall reaction, the R244L mutant has the kcat reduced approximately 10(3)-fold, with a 7 to 10-fold increase in substrate Km values; the R244H mutant has an approximately 10(5)-fold decrease in kcat. In contrast, the kcat values for hydrolysis of added PPPi by the R244L and R244H mutants have been reduced by less than 2 orders of magnitude. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme in which 98% of the Pi formed originates as the gamma-phosphoryl group of ATP, in the R244L mutant the orientation of the PPPi intermediate equilibrates at the active site yielding equal amounts of Pi from the alpha- and gamma-phosphoryl groups of ATP. Thus, the active-site arginine has a profound role in the cleavage of PPPi from ATP during AdoMet formation and in maintaining the orientation of PPPi in the active site, while playing a lesser role in the subsequent PPPi hydrolytic reaction.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]