ACIDIC RESIDUES IMPORTANT FOR SUBSTRATE-BINDING AND COFACTOR REACTIVITY IN EUKARYOTIC ORNITHINE DECARBOXYLASE IDENTIFIED BY ALANINE SCANNING MUTAGENESIS
Al. Osterman et al., ACIDIC RESIDUES IMPORTANT FOR SUBSTRATE-BINDING AND COFACTOR REACTIVITY IN EUKARYOTIC ORNITHINE DECARBOXYLASE IDENTIFIED BY ALANINE SCANNING MUTAGENESIS, The Journal of biological chemistry, 270(20), 1995, pp. 11797-11802
Ornithine decarboxylases from Trypanosoma brucei, mouse, and Leishmani
a donovani share strict specificity for three basic amino acids, ornit
hine, lysine, and arginine. To identify residues involved in this subs
trate specificity and/or in the reaction chemistry, six conserved acid
ic resides (Asp-88, Glu-94, Asp-233, Glu-274, Asp-361, and Asp-364) we
re mutated to alanine in the T. brucei enzyme. Each mutation causes a
substantial loss in enzyme efficiency. Most notably, mutation of Asp-3
61 increases the K-m for ornithine by 2000-fold, with little effect on
k(cat), suggesting that this residue is an important substrate bindin
g determinant. Mutation of the only strictly conserved acidic residue,
Glu-274, decreases k(cat) 50-fold; however, substitution of N-methylp
yridoxyl-5'-phosphate for pyridoxal-5'-phosphate as the cofactor in th
e reaction restores the k(cat) of E274A to wild-type levels. These dat
a demonstrate that Glu-274 interacts with the protonated pyridine nitr
ogen of the cofactor to enhance the electron withdrawing capability of
the ring, analogous to Asp-222 in aspartate aminotransferase (Onuffer
, J. J., and Kirsch, J. F. (1994) Protein Eng. 7, 413-424). Eukaryotic
ornithine decarboxylase is a homodimer with two shared active sites.
Residues 88, 94, 233, and 274 are contributed to each active site from
the same subunit as Lys 69, while residues 361 and 364 are part of th
e Cys-360 subunit.