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Volume 270, Number 41, Issue of October 13, 1995 pp. 24054-24059
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
The Phylogenetically Conserved Histidines of Escherichia coli Porphobilinogen Synthase Are Not Required for Catalysis

(Received for publication, March 7, 1995; and in revised form, July 19, 1995)

Laura W. Mitchell Marina Volin Eileen K. Jaffe

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) is a metalloenzyme that catalyzes the first common step of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis, the asymmetric condensation of two molecules of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) to form porphobilinogen. Chemical modification data implicate histidine as a catalytic residue of PBGS from both plants and mammals. Histidine may participate in the abstraction of two non-ionizable protons from each substrate molecule at the active site. Only one histidine is species-invariant among 17 known sequences of PBGS which have high overall sequence similarity. In Escherichia coli PBGS, this histidine is His. We performed site-directed mutagenesis on His, replacing it with alanine. The mutant protein H128A is catalytically active. His is part of a histidine- and cysteine-rich region of the sequence that is implicated in metal binding. The apparent K for Zn(II) binding to H128A is about an order of magnitude higher than for the wild type protein. E. coli PBGS also contains His which is conserved through the mammalian, fungal, and some bacterial PBGS. We mutated His to alanine, and both His and His simultaneously to alanine. All mutant proteins are catalytically competent; the V(max) values for H128A (44 units/mg), H126A (75 units/mg), and H126/128A (61 units/mg) were similar to wild type PBGS (50 units/mg) in the presence of saturating concentrations of metal ions. The apparent K for Zn(II) of H126A and H126/128A is not appreciably different from wild type. The activity of wild type and mutant proteins are all stimulated by an allosteric Mg(II); the mutant proteins all have a reduced affinity for Mg(II). We observe a pK of 7.5 in the wild type PBGS k/K pH profile as well as in those of H128A and H126/128A, suggesting that this pK is not the result of protonation/deprotonation of one of these histidines. H128A and H126/128A have a significantly increased K value for the substrate ALA. This is consistent with a role for one or both of these histidines as a ligand to the required Zn(II) of E. coli PBGS, which is known to participate in substrate binding. Past chemical modification may have inactivated the PBGS by blocking Zn(II) and ALA binding. In addition, the decreased K for E. coli PBGS at basic pH allows for the quantitation of active sites at four per octamer.




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