posted on 2000-06-29, 00:00authored byBakthavatsalam Sundararaju, Haoyuan Chen, Steven Shilcutt, Robert S. Phillips
Tyrosine phenol-lyase (TPL) from Citrobacter freundii is activated about 30-fold by monovalent
cations, the most effective being K+, NH4+, and Rb+. Previous X-ray crystal structure analysis has
demonstrated that the monovalent cation binding site is located at the interface between subunits, with
ligands contributed by the carbonyl oxygens of Gly52 and Asn262 from one chain and monodentate
ligation by one of the ε-oxygens of Glu69 from another chain [Antson, A. A., Demidkina, T. V., Gollnick,
P., Dauter, Z., Von Tersch, R. L., Long, J., Berezhnoy, S. N., Phillips, R. S., Harutyunyan, E. H., and
Wilson, K. S. (1993) Biochemistry32, 4195]. We have studied the effect of mutation of Glu69 to glutamine
(E69Q) and aspartate (E69D) to determine the role of Glu69 in the activation of TPL. E69Q TPL is
activated by K+, NH4+, and Rb+, with KD values similar to wild-type TPL, indicating that the negative
charge on Glu69 is not necessary for cation binding and activation. In contrast, E69D TPL exhibits very
low basal activity and only weak activation by monovalent cations, even though monovalent cations are
capable of binding, indicating that the geometry of the monovalent cation binding site is critical for
activation. Rapid-scanning stopped-flow kinetic studies of wild-type TPL show that the activating effect
of the cation is seen in an acceleration of rates of quinonoid intermediate formation (30−50-fold) and of
phenol elimination. Similar rapid-scanning stopped-flow results were obtained with E69Q TPL; however,
E69D TPL shows only a 4-fold increase in the rate of quinonoid intermediate formation with K+.
Preincubation of TPL with monovalent cations is necessary to observe the rate acceleration in stopped
flow kinetic experiments, suggesting that the activation of TPL by monovalent cations is a slow process.
In agreement with this conclusion, a slow increase (k < 0.5 s-1) in fluorescence intensity (λex = 420 nm,
λem = 505 nm) is observed when wild-type and E69Q TPL are mixed with K+, Rb+, and NH4+ but not
Li+ or Na+. E69D TPL shows no change in fluorescence under these conditions. High concentrations
(>100 mM) of all monovalent cations result in inhibition of wild-type TPL. This inhibition is probably
due to cation binding to the ES complex to form a complex that releases pyruvate slowly.