The Active-Site Arginine of S-Adenosylmethionine Synthetase Orients the Reaction Intermediate
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 37 (39), 13499-13506
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi9811011
Abstract
S-Adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) synthetase catalyzes the formation of AdoMet and tripolyphosphate (PPPi) from ATP and L-methionine and the subsequent hydrolysis of the PPPi to PPi and Pi before product release. Little is known about the roles of active-site residues involved in catalysis of the two sequential reactions that occur at opposite ends of the polyphosphate chain. Crystallographic studies of Escherichia coli AdoMet synthetase showed that arginine-244 is the only arginine near the polyphosphate-binding site. Arginine-244 is embedded as the seventh residue in the conserved sequence DxGxTxxKxI which is also found at the active site of inorganic pyrophosphatases, suggesting a potential pyrophosphate-binding motif. Chemical modification of AdoMet synthetase by the arginine-specific reagents phenylglyoxal or p-hydroxyphenylglyoxal inactivates the enzyme. ATP and PPPi protect the enzyme from inactivation, consistent with the presence of an important arginine residue in the vicinity of the polyphosphate-binding site. Site-specific mutagenesis has been used to change the conserved arginine-244 to either leucine (R244L) or histidine (R244H). In the overall reaction, the R244L mutant has the kcat reduced approximately 10(3)-fold, with a 7 to 10-fold increase in substrate Km values; the R244H mutant has an approximately 10(5)-fold decrease in kcat. In contrast, the kcat values for hydrolysis of added PPPi by the R244L and R244H mutants have been reduced by less than 2 orders of magnitude. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme in which 98% of the Pi formed originates as the gamma-phosphoryl group of ATP, in the R244L mutant the orientation of the PPPi intermediate equilibrates at the active site yielding equal amounts of Pi from the alpha- and gamma-phosphoryl groups of ATP. Thus, the active-site arginine has a profound role in the cleavage of PPPi from ATP during AdoMet formation and in maintaining the orientation of PPPi in the active site, while playing a lesser role in the subsequent PPPi hydrolytic reaction.Keywords
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