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A more recent version of this article appeared on February 7, 2003
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M211983200v1
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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print December 9, 2002
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M211983200
Submitted on November 25, 2002
Revised on December 9, 2002
Accepted on December 9, 2002

Analysis of the catalytic and binding residues of the diadenosine tetraphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase from Caenorhabditis elegans by site-directed mutagenesis

Hend M. Abdelghany, Scott Bailey, G. Michael Blackburn, John B. Rafferty, and Alexander G. McLennan

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, Merseyside L69 7ZB

Corresponding Author: agmclen{at}liv.ac.uk

The contributions to substrate binding and catalysis of 13 amino acid residues of the Caenorhabditis elegans diadenosine tetraphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase (Ap4A hydrolase) predicted from the crystal structure of an enzyme-inhibitor complex have been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Sixteen GST-Ap4A hydrolase fusion proteins were expressed and their kcat and Km values determined after removal of the GST domain. As expected for a Nudix hydrolase, the wild type kcat of 23 s-1 was reduced by 105-, 103- and 30-fold respectively by replacement of the conserved P4 phosphate-binding catalytic residues Glu56, Glu52 and Glu103 by Gln. Km values were not affected, indicating a lack of importance for substrate binding. In contrast, mutating His31 to Val or Ala and Lys83 to Met produced 10- and 16-fold increases in Km compared to the wild type value of 8.8 mu M. These residues stabilise the P1 phosphate. H31V and H31A had a normal kcat but K83M showed a 37-fold reduction in kcat. Lys36 also stabilises the P1 phosphate and a K36M mutant had a 10-fold reduced kcat but a relatively normal Km. Thus both Lys36 and Lys83 may play a role in catalysis. The previously suggested roles of Tyr27, His38, Lys79 and Lys81 in stabilising the P2 and P3 phosphates were not confirmed by mutagenesis, indicating the absence of phosphate-specific binding contacts in this region. Also, mutating both Tyr76 and Tyr121, which clamp one substrate adenosine moiety between them in the crystal structure, to Ala only increased Km 4-fold. It is concluded that interactions with the P1 and P4 phosphates are minimum and sufficient requirements for substrate binding by this class of enzyme, indicating that it may have a much wider substrate range then previously believed.


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