Jk. Rubach et al., Contributions of Valine-292 in the nicotinamide binding site of liver alcohol dehydrogenase and dynamics to catalysis, BIOCHEM, 40(42), 2001, pp. 12686-12694
The participation of Val-292 in catalysis by alcohol dehydrogenase and the
involvement of dynamics were investigated. Val-292 interacts with the nicot
inamide ring of the bound coenzyme and may facilitate hydride transfer. The
substitution of Val-292 with Ser (V292S) increases the dissociation consta
nts for the coenzymes (NAD(+) by 50-fold, NADH by 75-fold) and the turnover
numbers by 3-7-fold. The V292S enzyme crystallized in the presence of NAD(
+) and 2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorobenzyl alcohol has an open conformation similar
to the structure of the wild-type apo-enzyme, rather than the closed confo
rmation observed for ternary complexes with wild-type enzyme. The V292S sub
stitution perturbs the conformational equilibrium of the enzyme and decreas
es the kinetic complexity, which permits study of the hydride transfer step
with steady-state kinetics. Eyring plots show that the DeltaH double dagge
r for the oxidation (V-1) of the protio and deuterio benzyl alcohols is 13
kcal/mol and that the kinetic isotope effect of 4.1 is essentially temperat
ure-independent. Eyring plots for the catalytic efficiency for reduction of
benzaldehyde (V-2/K-p) with NADH or NADD are distinctly convex, being temp
erature-dependent from 5 to 25 degreesC and temperature-independent from 25
to 50 degreesC; the kinetic isotope effect of 3.2 for V-2/K-p is essential
ly independent of the temperature. The temperature dependencies and isotope
effects for V-1 and V-2/K-p are not adequately explained by semiclassical
transition state theory and are better explained by hydride transfer occurr
ing, through vibrationally assisted tunneling.