Kinetics and mechanism of the citrate synthase from the thermophilic archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum. 2000

L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Division of Biology and Biomedical Sciences, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.

The kinetics and mechanism of the citrate synthase from a moderate thermophile, Thermoplasma acidophilum (TpCS), are compared with those of the citrate synthase from a mesophile, pig heart (PCS). All discrete steps in the mechanistic sequence of PCS can be identified in TpCS. The catalytic strategies identified in PCS, destabilization of the oxaloacetate substrate carbonyl and stabilization of the reactive species, acetyl-CoA enolate, are present in TpCS. Conformational changes, which allow the enzyme to efficiently catalyze both condensation of acetyl-CoA thioester and subsequently hydrolysis of citryl-CoA thioester within the same active site, occur in both enzymes. However, significant differences exist between the two enzymes. PCS is a characteristically efficient enzyme: no internal step is clearly rate-limiting and the condensation step is readily reversible. TpCS is a less efficient catalyst. Over a broad temperature range, inadequate stabilization of the transition state for citryl-CoA hydrolysis renders this step nearly rate-limiting for the forward reaction of TpCS. Further, excessive stabilization of the citryl-CoA intermediate renders the condensation step nearly irreversible. Values of substrate and solvent deuterium isotope effects are consistent with the kinetic model. Near its temperature optimum (70 degrees C), there is a modest increase in the reversibility of the condensation step for TpCS, but reversibility still falls short of that shown by PCS at 37 degrees C. The root cause of the catalytic inefficiency of TpCS may lie in the lack of protein flexibility imposed by the requirement for thermal stability of the protein itself or its temperature-labile substrate, oxaloacetate.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007526 Isoelectric Point The pH in solutions of proteins and related compounds at which the dipolar ions are at a maximum. Isoelectric Points,Point, Isoelectric,Points, Isoelectric
D007700 Kinetics The rate dynamics in chemical or physical systems.
D011522 Protons Stable elementary particles having the smallest known positive charge, found in the nuclei of all elements. The proton mass is less than that of a neutron. A proton is the nucleus of the light hydrogen atom, i.e., the hydrogen ion. Hydrogen Ions,Hydrogen Ion,Ion, Hydrogen,Ions, Hydrogen,Proton
D002942 Circular Dichroism A change from planar to elliptic polarization when an initially plane-polarized light wave traverses an optically active medium. (McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, 4th ed) Circular Dichroism, Vibrational,Dichroism, Circular,Vibrational Circular Dichroism
D002950 Citrate (si)-Synthase Enzyme that catalyzes the first step of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (CITRIC ACID CYCLE). It catalyzes the reaction of oxaloacetate and acetyl CoA to form citrate and coenzyme A. This enzyme was formerly listed as EC 4.1.3.7. Citrate Synthase,Synthase, Citrate
D003065 Coenzyme A CoA,CoASH
D004789 Enzyme Activation Conversion of an inactive form of an enzyme to one possessing metabolic activity. It includes 1, activation by ions (activators); 2, activation by cofactors (coenzymes); and 3, conversion of an enzyme precursor (proenzyme or zymogen) to an active enzyme. Activation, Enzyme,Activations, Enzyme,Enzyme Activations
D004791 Enzyme Inhibitors Compounds or agents that combine with an enzyme in such a manner as to prevent the normal substrate-enzyme combination and the catalytic reaction. Enzyme Inhibitor,Inhibitor, Enzyme,Inhibitors, Enzyme
D006863 Hydrogen-Ion Concentration The normality of a solution with respect to HYDROGEN ions; H+. It is related to acidity measurements in most cases by pH pH,Concentration, Hydrogen-Ion,Concentrations, Hydrogen-Ion,Hydrogen Ion Concentration,Hydrogen-Ion Concentrations
D000105 Acetyl Coenzyme A Acetyl CoA participates in the biosynthesis of fatty acids and sterols, in the oxidation of fatty acids and in the metabolism of many amino acids. It also acts as a biological acetylating agent. Acetyl CoA,Acetyl-CoA,CoA, Acetyl,Coenzyme A, Acetyl

Related Publications

L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
December 1994, Structure (London, England : 1993),
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
July 1993, Journal of molecular biology,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
January 2015, PloS one,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
May 2003, Journal of biochemistry,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
February 1993, European journal of biochemistry,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
August 2001, Journal of structural biology,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
April 1991, FEBS letters,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
June 2014, Biochimie,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
December 2014, International journal of molecular sciences,
L C Kurz, and G Drysdale, and M Riley, and M A Tomar, and J Chen, and R J Russell, and M J Danson
September 2014, Extremophiles : life under extreme conditions,
Copied contents to your clipboard!