Jm. Denu et al., THE CATALYTIC ROLE OF ASPARTIC ACID-92 IN A HUMAN DUAL-SPECIFIC PROTEIN-TYROSINE-PHOSPHATASE, Biochemistry, 34(10), 1995, pp. 3396-3403
The mechanism of catalysis for the human dual-specific (vaccinia H1-re
lated) protein-tyrosine phosphatase was investigated. The pH dependenc
e of the k(cat) value is bell-shaped when p-nitrophenyl phosphate was
employed as a model substrate. The k(cat)/K-m pH profile rises with a
slope of 2 and decreases with a slope of -1, indicating that two group
s must be unprotonated and one group must be protonated for activity.
An amino acid residue with an apparent pK(a) value of 5.5 +/- 0.2 must
be unprotonated and a residue with a pK(a) value of 5.7 must be unpro
tonated for activity. The pK(a) value of the catalytic cysteine-124 (C
124) was 5.6 +/- 0.1. The aspartic acid-92-asparagine (D92N) mutant en
zyme was 100-fold less active than the native enzyme and exhibited the
loss of the basic limb in the pH profiles, suggesting that in the nat
ive enzyme D92 must be protonated for activity. The D92 residue is con
served throughout the entire family of dual-specific phosphatases. Mut
ants glutamic acid-6-glutamine, glutamic acid-32-glutamine, aspartic a
cid-14-asparagine, and aspartic acid-110-asparagine had less than a 2-
fold effect on the kinetic parameters when compared to native enzyme.
Based upon the lack of a ''burst'' in rapid reaction kinetics, formati
on of the intermediate is rate-limiting with both native and D92N muta
nt enzymes. In agreement with rate-limiting formation of the intermedi
ate, the pK(a) value of 5.5 for the group which must be unprotonated f
or activity was assigned to C124. The D92 residue acts as a general ac
id by protonating the phenolate ion in the rate-limiting formation of
the intermediate. D92 may also serve as general base by abstracting a
proton from a water molecule in the hydrolysis of the phosphoenzyme in
termediate.