JBC, Vol. 250, Issue 17, 6861-6869, Sep, 1975
Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, a fluorescent probe in the active site of aspartate transcarbamylase
T. D. Kempe and G. R. Stark
Pyridoxal-P reacts specifically with a single lysine residue at the active
site of Escherichia coli aspartate transcarbamylase (Greenwell, P., Jewett,
S. L., and Stark, G. R. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 5994-6001). Reduction of
the Schiff base with sodium borohydride, succinylation of the remaining
lysine residues, and digestion with trypsin result in formation of a single
pyridoxyl peptide, which was purified to homogeneity after chromatography
on DEAE-cellulose, treatment with alkaline phosphatase, and
rechromatography. Amino acid composition and the results of limited
sequential degradation showed that this peptide corresponds to residues 62
to 98 in the sequence of Konigsberg and co-workers, and contains 2 residues
of lysine (Henderson, L., Roy, D., Martin, D., and Konigsberg, W., personal
communication). By similar isolation, a second peptide was obtained from
unsuccinylated catalytic subunit, containing only the pyridoxylated lysine,
which corresponds to Lys-80. Derivatives of catalytic subunit containing an
average of either one, two, or three pyridoxamine-P moieties per trimer
have been prepared by reduction. These species, which retain catalytic
activity in proportion to their unmodified active sites, were recombined
with regulatory subunit to prepare partially modified derivatives of native
aspartate transcarbamylase. At pH 8, fluorescence emission bands were
observed at 340 nm, due to aromatic amino acids in the protein, and at 395
nm, due to the pyridoxamine-P moiety. Upon excitation at 280 nm energy
transfer from protein to pyridoxamine-P was approximately 15%. The
properties of the probe were used to study changes accompanying the binding
of substrates and inhibitors. The effects of CTP and ATP were small. With
the transition state analog N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) or the
substrate carbamyl-P, two types of response were observed. Derivatives of
catalytic subunit and native enzyme which contain some unmodified sites and
hence retain partial catalytic activity gave large increases in
fluorescence at 395 nm. However, fully modified inactive derivatives gave
much smaller increases. A derivative of native enzyme containing one triply
modified and one unmodified catalytic subunit behaved like the other
partially modified species. These results indicate that there is
communication among the active sites of different catalytic trimers in
modified native enzyme, as well as among active sites within the same
modified catalytic trimer. The increases in fluorescence result from a red
shift of the absorption maximum of the pyridoxamine-P moiety from 315 to
325 nm, which increases the absorbance at the excitation wavelength for
fluorescence. At pH 7, the absorption spectrum is already shifted and,
consequently, the binding of PALA and carbamyl-P has little effect on the
fluorescence. Therefore, the binding of these compounds at pH 8.0 must
cause a structural change in the protein, which in turn causes protonation
of a group in the modified active sites, altering the spectral properties.