| Literature DB >> 10433699 |
M W Pinkse1, M Merkx, B A Averill.
Abstract
Purple acid phosphatases (PAPs) employ a dinuclear Fe(3+)Fe(2+) or Fe(3+)Zn(2+) center to catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphate monoesters. The interaction of fluoride with bovine spleen purple acid phosphatase (BSPAP) has been studied using a combination of steady-state kinetics and spectroscopic methods. For FeZn-BSPAP, the nature of the inhibition changes from noncompetitive at pH 6.5 (K(i(comp)) approximately K(i(uncomp)) approximately 2 mM) to uncompetitive at pH 5.0 (K(i(uncomp)) = 0.2 mM). The inhibition constant for AlZn-BSPAP at pH 5.0 (K(i) = 3 microM) is approximately 50-70-fold lower than that observed for both FeZn-BSAP and GaZn-BSPAP, suggesting that fluoride binds to the trivalent metal. Fluoride binding to the enzyme-substrate complex was found to be remarkably slow; hence, the kinetics of fluoride binding were studied in some detail for FeZn-, AlZn-, and FeFe-BSPAP at pH 5.0 and for FeZn-BSPAP at pH 6.5. Since the enzyme kinetics studies indicated the formation of a ternary enzyme-substrate-fluoride complex, the binding of fluoride to FeZn-BSPAP was studied using optical and EPR spectroscopies, both in the presence and absence of phosphate. The characteristic optical and EPR spectra of FeZn-BSPAP. F and FeZn-BSPAP.PO(4).F are similar at pH 5.0 and pH 6.5, indicating the formation of similar fluoride complexes at both pHs. A structural model for the ternary enzyme-(substrate/phosphate)-fluoride complexes is proposed that can explain the results from both the spectroscopic and the enzyme kinetics experiments. In this model, fluoride binds to the trivalent metal replacing the water/hydroxide ligand that is essential for the hydrolysis reaction to take place, while phosphate or the phosphate ester coordinates to the divalent metal ion.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10433699 DOI: 10.1021/bi990446w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162