Effects of monovalent cations and divalent metal ions on Escherichia coli selenophosphate synthetase.
- 19 July 1994
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 91 (15) , 7326-7329
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.91.15.7326
Abstract
A labile selenium donor compound, selenophosphate, is formed from selenide and ATP by selenophosphate synthetase. A divalent metal ion, Mg2+, and a monovalent cation, K+, NH4+, or Rb+, are required for selenophosphate synthetase activity [Veres, Z., Kim, I. Y., Scholz, T. D. & Stadtman, T. C. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 10597-10603]. Na+ and Li+ are ineffective as activators and in the presence of K+ are inhibitory. Mn-ATP, although not able to replace Mg-ATP for catalytic activity, binds to the enzyme provided an active monovalent cation is present. No Mn-ATP is bound when K+ is replaced with Na+. The requirement for K+, both for Mn-ATP binding and for catalytic activity of the synthetase, indicates a specific monovalent cation-induced conformational state of the enzyme. Previously we reported that activity of the enzyme is markedly inhibited by micromolar levels of Zn2+ in the presence of millimolar levels of Mg2+ [Kim, I. Y., Veres, Z. & Stadtman, T. C. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 27020-27025]. Binding of Mn-ATP also is decreased upon addition of Zn2+, indicating that the inhibitory effect of Zn2+ is exerted at the substrate-binding step of the overall selenophosphate synthetase reaction. When a cysteine residue at position 17 or 19 is replaced with serine, Mn-ATP binding to these mutant enzymes is unaffected by Zn2+ addition. Direct involvement of these cysteine residues in the zinc binding site was shown by use of 65ZnCl2. Radioactive Zn2+ bound to wild-type enzyme and was retained after gel filtration, but under the same conditions the catalytically inactive Cys-17 mutant protein and the catalytically active Cys-19 mutant enzyme were unlabeled.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selenophosphate synthetase. Enzyme properties and catalytic reaction.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1994
- Biochemical analysis of Escherichia coli selenophosphate synthetase mutants. Lysine 20 is essential for catalytic activity and cysteine 17/19 for 8-azido-ATP derivatization.1993
- Monoselenophosphate: Synthesis, characterization, and identity with the prokaryotic biological selenium donor, compound SePXBiochemistry, 1993
- Chemical modification and mutagenesis studies on zinc binding of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases.1993
- Metal-binding site in a class I tRNA synthetase localized to a cysteine cluster inserted into nucleotide-binding fold.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Escherichia coli mutant SELD enzymes. The cysteine 17 residue is essential for selenophosphate formation from ATP and selenide.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1992
- Synthesis of 5-methylaminomethyl-2-selenouridine in tRNAs: 31P NMR studies show the labile selenium donor synthesized by the selD gene product contains selenium bonded to phosphorus.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Selenocysteine synthase from Escherichia coli. Nucleotide sequence of the gene (selA) and purification of the protein.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1991
- In vitro synthesis of selenocysteinyl-tRNA(UCA) from seryl-tRNA(UCA): involvement and characterization of the selD gene product.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990
- Thallium-205 nuclear magnetic resonance study of pyruvate kinase and its substrates. Evidence for a substrate-induced conformational change.1971