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  • Title: Mutation to phenylalanine of tyrosine 371 in tyrosine hydroxylase increases the affinity for phenylalanine.
    Author: Daubner SC, Fitzpatrick PF.
    Journal: Biochemistry; 1998 Nov 17; 37(46):16440-4. PubMed ID: 9819237.
    Abstract:
    The aromatic amino acid hydroxylases tyrosine and phenylalanine hydroxylase both contain non-heme iron, utilize oxygen and tetrahydrobiopterin, and are tetramers of identical subunits. The catalytic domains of these enzymes are homologous, and recent X-ray crystallographic analyses show the active sites of the two enzymes are very similar. The hydroxyl oxygens of tyrosine 371 in tyrosine hydroxylase and of tyrosine 325 of phenylalanine hydroxylase are 5 and 4.5 A, respectively, away from the active site iron in the enzymes. To determine whether this residue has a role in the catalytic mechanism as previously suggested [Erlandsen, H., et al. (1997) Nat. Struct. Biol. 4, 995-1000], tyrosine 371 of tyrosine hydroxylase was altered to phenylalanine by site-directed mutagenesis. The Y371F protein was fully active in tyrosine hydroxylation, eliminating an essential mechanistic role for this residue. There was no change in the product distribution seen with phenylalanine or 4-methylphenylalanine as a substrate, suggesting that the reactivity of the hydroxylating intermediate was unaffected. However, the KM value for phenylalanine was decreased 10-fold in the mutant protein. These results are interpreted as an indication of greater conformational flexibility in the active site of the mutant protein.
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