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JBC, Vol. 252, Issue 7, 2405-2411, Apr, 1977
M. F. Roberts, R. A. Deems, T. C. Mincey and E. A. Dennis
Reaction of phospholipase A2 (Naja naja naja) with p-bromophenacyl
bromidine leads to almost complete loss of enzymatic activity. The rate of
inactivation is pH-dependent with pKa equals 6.9 for the ionizing residue.
p-Bromophenacyl bromide modifies 0.5 mol of histidine/mol of enzyme as
judged by amino acid analysis and incorporation studies with 14C-labeled
reagent. The rate of inactivation is affected by various cations; a
saturating concentration of Ca2+ decreases the rate 5-fold, while Mn2+
increases the rate by a factor of 2. Triton X-100, which by itself has
little affinity for the enzyme, protects against inactivation, presumably
by sequestering p-bromophenacyl bromide into the apolar micellar core. The
mixed micelle system of Triton X-100, dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine, and
Ba2+ offers the best protection, lowering the inactivation rate by at least
50-fold. This suggests an active site role for the histidine residue.
Ethoxyformic anhydride also modifies phospholipase A2, by acylation of the
two amino groups, a tyrosine, and 0.5 mol of histidine/mol of enzyme
without totally inactivating the enzyme. Removal of the ethoxyformyl group
from the histidine does not reactivate the enzyme. Thus, modification of
0.5 mol of histidine with this reagent is not responsible for the 85% loss
of activity seen. Ethoxyformylated enzyme, with 0.5 mol of acylated
histidine/mol of enzyme, can be further inactivated by treatment with
p-bromophenacyl bromide. The resulting derivative contains 0.4 mol of the
14C-labeled p-bromophenacyl group. Other modifiable groups do not show this
half-residue reactivity. For example, oxidation of phospholipase A2 with
N-bromosuccinimide leads to rapid destruction of 1.0 tryptophan residue and
5% residual activity. The results of these chemical modification
experiments can be interpreted in terms of a model in which the active
species of enzyme interacting with mixed micelles is a dimer (or possibly
higher order aggregate). The dimer, though composed of identical subunits,
is asymmetric; the histidine of one subunit is accessible to ethoxyformic
anhydride, while the other histidine is near a hydrophobic region of the
enzyme and is chemically reactive toward p-bromophenacyl bromide.
Chemical modification of the histidine residue in phospholipase A2 (Naja naja naja). A case of half-site reactivity
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