Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10574943 Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The kinetics and spectroscopic properties of the single polypeptide and proteolytically cleaved form of recombinant Fe3+Fe2+ human purple acid phosphatase (recHPAP) exhibit significant differences, primarily due to a difference in pKes,1 (the value of an acid dissociation constant of the ES complex). These differences are due to the presence or absence, respectively, of an interaction between an aspartate residue in an exposed loop of the protein and one or more active site residues. To further explore the origin of these differences, the ferrous ion of recHPAP has been replaced by zinc. Analysis of the reconstituted Fe3+Zn2+recHPAP reveals an unexpected catalytic activity versus pH profile, in that the optimal pH is 6.3, similar to that of the proteolytically cleaved form (6.5). Moreover, replacement of the ferrous ion by zinc increases the turnover number more than 10-fold; the pKes values are also shifted as expected for the change in the divalent metal ion. Although the EPR spectra of both single polypeptide and proteolytically cleaved Fe3+Zn2+-recHPAP are independent of pH over the range 4.5-6.2, the visible spectrum of Fe3+Zn2+-recHPAP is pH dependent. These results suggest that the properties and environment of the divalent metal are important in determining the catalytic properties of mammalian PAPs, and in particular that a solvent molecule coordinated to the divalent metal ion may play a critical role in the catalytic cycle of these enzymes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry
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