Phosphate forms an unusual tripodal complex with the Fe-Mn center of sweet potato purple acid phosphatase


Autoria(s): Schenk, G.; Gahan, L. R.; Carrington, L. E.; Mitic, N.; Valizadeh, M.; Hamilton, S. E.; de Jersey, J.; Guddat, L. W.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Purple acid phosphatases (PAPs) are a family of binuclear metalloenzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphoric acid esters and anhydrides. A PAP in sweet potato has a unique, strongly antiferromagnetically coupled Fe(III)-Mn(II) center and is distinguished from other PAPs by its increased catalytic efficiency for a range of activated and unactivated phosphate esters, its strict requirement for Mn(II), and the presence of a mu-oxo bridge at pH 4.90. This enzyme displays maximum catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K-m) at pH 4.5, whereas its catalytic rate constant (k(cat)) is maximal at near-neutral pH, and, in contrast to other PAPs, its catalytic parameters are not dependent on the pK(a) of the leaving group. The crystal structure of the phosphate-bound Fe(III)-Mn(II) PAP has been determined to 2.5-Angstrom resolution (final R-free value of 0.256). Structural comparisons of the active site of sweet potato, red kidney bean, and mammalian PAPs show several amino acid substitutions in the sweet potato enzyme that can account for its increased catalytic efficiency. The phosphate molecule binds in an unusual tripodal mode to the two metal ions, with two of the phosphate oxygen atoms binding to Fe(III) and Mn(II), a third oxygen atom bridging the two metal ions, and the fourth oxygen pointing toward the substrate binding pocket. This binding mode is unique among the known structures in this family but is reminiscent of phosphate binding to urease and of sulfate binding to A protein phosphatase. The structure and kinetics support the hypothesis that the bridging oxygen atom initiates hydrolysis.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76572

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

National Academy of Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Binuclear Metal Center #Phosphate Coordination #Pig Allantoic Fluid #Esculentum Cell-cultures #Crystal-structure #Bovine Spleen #Active-site #Protein Phosphatase #Coordination Modes #Anion Complexes #Beef Spleen #Uteroferrin #Multidisciplinary Sciences #C1 #250106 Mechanisms of Reactions #250102 Chemistry of Catalysis #270108 Enzymes #250105 Structural Chemistry #780103 Chemical sciences #780105 Biological sciences #060112 Structural Biology (incl. Macromolecular Modelling)
Tipo

Journal Article