Site-Directed Mutagenesis of Glutamate-166 in .beta.-Lactamase Leads to a Branched Path Mechanism

Abstract
Glutamate-166 of the Bacillus licheniformis beta-lactamase was specifically mutated to aspartate and cysteine in order to probe the function of this residue in catalysis. In both cases, a large decrease in activity (kcat/Km was 3.5 x 10(-5) smaller for E166C and 1 x 10(-3) smaller for E166D than for the wild-type) was observed, although the kinetics for the two mutants were very different. The pH-rate profiles for E166D and E166C reflected the ionization characteristics of the new residue at site 166. This result indicates that the ionization of Glu-166 is responsible for the acidic limb of the kcat/Km-pH profiles, and suggests that the function of Glu-166 is that of a general base catalyst. The kinetics of the E166C mutant were investigated in detail. An initial burst was observed, whose amplitude was stoichiometric with the enzyme concentration, suggesting rate-limiting deacylation of the acyl-enzyme intermediate. However, further study revealed that in the presence of 0.5 M sodium sulfate, which stabilizes the native conformational state, the magnitude of the burst corresponded to 2 equiv of enzyme. This observation, in conjunction with the limited effect of the mutation on Km, indicated that the mutation resulted in a change in the kinetic mechanism from the linear, acyl-enzyme pathway to one with a branch leading to an inactive form of the acyl-enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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