Isomerization of the uncomplexed actinidin molecule: kinetic accessibility of additional steps in enzyme catalysis provided by solvent perturbation.
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ABSTRACT: The effects of increasing the content of the aprotic dipolar organic co-solvent acetonitrile on the observed first-order rate constant (k(obs)) of the pre-steady state acylation phases of the hydrolysis of N-acetyl-Phe-Gly methyl thionester catalysed by the cysteine proteinase variants actinidin and papain in sodium acetate buffer, pH 5.3, were investigated by stopped-flow spectral analysis. With low acetonitrile content, plots of k(obs) against [S]0 for the actinidin reaction are linear with an ordinate intercept of magnitude consistent with a five-step mechanism involving a post-acylation conformational change. Increasing the acetonitrile content results in marked deviations of the plots from linearity with a rate minimum around [S]0=150 microM. The unusual negative dependence of k(obs) on [S]0 in the range 25-150 microM is characteristic of a rate-determining isomerization of the free enzyme before substrate binding, additional to the five-step mechanism. There was no evidence for this phenomenon nor for the post-acylation conformational change in the analogous reaction with papain. For this enzyme, however, acetonitrile acts as an inhibitor with approximately uncompetitive characteristics. Possible mechanistic consequences of the differential solvent-perturbed kinetics are indicated. The free enzyme isomerization of actinidin may provide an explanation for the marked difference in sensitivity between this enzyme and papain of binding site-catalytic site signalling in reactions of substrate-derived 2-pyridyl disulphide reactivity probes.
SUBMITTER: Reid JD
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1223986 | biostudies-other | 2004 Mar
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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