Mechanistic Implications of Mutations to the Active Site Lysine
of Porphobilinogen Synthase*
Laura W.
Mitchell
,
Marina
Volin,
Jacob
Martins, and
Eileen K.
Jaffe§
From the Institute for Cancer Research, Fox Chase Cancer Center,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19111
Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) is a
homo-octameric protein that catalyzes the complex asymmetric
condensation of two molecules of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA). The only
characterized intermediate in the PBGS-catalyzed reaction is a Schiff
base that forms between the first ALA that binds and a conserved
lysine, which in Escherichia coli PBGS is Lys-246 and in
human PBGS is Lys-252. In this study, E. coli PBGS mutants
K246H, K246M, K246W, K246N, and K246G and human PBGS mutant K252G were
characterized. Alterations to this lysine result in a disabled but not
totally inactive protein suggesting an alternate mechanism in
which proximity and orientation are major catalytic devices.
13C NMR studies of [3,5-13C]porphobilinogen
bound at the active sites of the E. coli PBGS and the
mutants show only minor chemical shift differences, i.e. environmental alterations. Mammalian PBGS is established to have four
functional active sites, whereas the crystal structure of E. coli PBGS shows eight spatially distinct and structurally
equivalent subunits. Biochemical data for E. coli PBGS have
been interpreted to support both four and eight active sites. A
unifying hypothesis is that formation of the Schiff base between this
lysine and ALA triggers a conformational change that results in
asymmetry. Product binding studies with wild-type E. coli
PBGS and K246G demonstrate that both bind porphobilinogen at four per
octamer although the latter cannot form the Schiff base from substrate.
Thus, formation of the lysine to ALA Schiff base is not required to
initiate the asymmetry that results in half-site reactivity.
*
This work was supported by NIEHS Grant ES03654 from
the National Institutes of Health, by National Institutes of Health
Grant CA06927 (to I. C. R.), and by an appropriation from the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article
must therefore be hereby marked
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accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section
1734 solely to indicate this fact.