Literature DB >> 16846242

Kinetic and chemical mechanism of alpha-isopropylmalate synthase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Luiz Pedro S de Carvalho1, John S Blanchard.   

Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis alpha-isopropylmalate synthase (MtIPMS) catalyzes the condensation of acetyl-coenzyme A (AcCoA) with alpha-ketoisovalerate (alpha-KIV) and the subsequent hydrolysis of alpha-isopropylmalyl-CoA to generate the products CoA and alpha-isopropylmalate (alpha-IPM). This is the first committed step in l-leucine biosynthesis. We have purified recombinant MtIPMS and characterized it using a combination of steady-state kinetics, isotope effects, isotopic labeling, and (1)H-NMR spectroscopy. The alpha-keto acid specificity of the enzyme is narrow, and the acyl-CoA specificity is absolute for AcCoA. In the absence of alpha-KIV, MtIPMS does not enolize the alpha protons of AcCoA but slowly hydrolyzes acyl-CoA analogues. Initial velocity studies, product inhibition, and dead-end inhibition studies indicate that MtIPMS follows a nonrapid equilibrium random bi-bi kinetic mechanism, with a preferred pathway to the ternary complex. MtIPMS requires two catalytic bases for maximal activity (both with pK(a) values of ca. 6.7), and we suggest that one catalyzes deprotonation and enolization of AcCoA and the other activates the water molecule involved in the hydrolysis of alpha-isopropylmalyl-CoA. Primary deuterium and solvent kinetic isotope effects indicate that there is a step after chemistry that is rate-limiting, although, with poor substrates such as pyruvate, hydrolysis becomes partially rate-limiting. Our data is inconsistent with the suggestion that a metal-bound water is involved in hydrolysis. Finally, our results indicate that the hydrolysis of alpha-isopropylmalyl-CoA is direct, without the formation of a cyclic anhydride intermediate. On the basis of these results, a chemical mechanism for the MtIPMS-catalyzed reaction is proposed.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16846242      PMCID: PMC2507874          DOI: 10.1021/bi0606602

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  33 in total

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