Transcriptional regulation of tyrosine phenol-lyase gene mediated through TyrR and cAMP receptor protein. (1/33)

Using a lac reporter system in Escherichia coli, we showed that the expression of E. herbicola tpl was regulated through TyrR and cAMP receptor protein. Three TyrR boxes upstream of tpl were essential for full expression. The results suggested that the tyrosine-mediated TyrR hexamerization was an important process. The DNA bending between two TyrR boxes, which is triggered by the binding of cAMP receptor protein, may facilitate the conformational change of TyrRs.  (+info)

Pyridoxal 5'-phoshate schiff base in Citrobacter freundii tyrosinephenol-lyase. Ionic and tautomeric equilibria. (2/33)

Spectral properties of the internal Schiff base in tyrosine phenol-lyase have been investigated in the presence of an activating cation K+ and a cation-inhibitor Na+. The holoenzyme absorption spectra in the pH range 6.5-8.7 were recorded in the presence of K+. No apparent pKa value of the coenzyme chromophore was found in this pH range, indicating that the internal Schiff base does not change its ionic form on going from pH 6.5 to 8.7. To determine the ionic state and tautomeric composition of the Schiff base in tyrosine phenol-lyase, the absorption and circular dichroism spectra were analyzed using lognormal distribution curves. The predominant form of the internal Schiff base is that with protonated pyridinium and aldimine nitrogen atoms and deprotonated 3'-hydroxy group, i.e. the ketoenamine. This form is in prototropic equilibrium with its enolimine tautomer. The internal aldimine ionic form is changed upon replacement of K+ with Na+. This replacement leads to a significant decrease in the pKa value of pyridinium nitrogen of the pyridoxal-P.  (+info)

Citrobacter freundii tyrosine phenol-lyase: the role of asparagine 185 in modulating enzyme function through stabilization of a quinonoid intermediate. (3/33)

Asn185 is an invariant residue in all known sequences of TPL and of closely related tryptophanase and it may be aligned with the Asn194 in aspartate aminotransferase. According to X-ray data, in the holoenzyme and in the Michaelis complex Asn185 does not interact with the cofactor pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, but in the external aldimine a conformational change occurs which is accompanied by formation of a hydrogen bond between Asn185 and the oxygen atom in position 3 of the cofactor. The substitution of Asn185 in TPL by alanine results in a mutant N185A TPL of moderate residual activity (2%) with respect to adequate substrates, L-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine. The affinities of the mutant enzyme for various amino acid substrates and inhibitors, studied by both steady-state and rapid kinetic techniques, were lower than for the wild-type TPL. This effect mainly results from destabilization of the quinonoid intermediate, and it is therefore concluded that the hydrogen bond between Asn185 and the oxygen at the C-3 position of the cofactor is maintained in the quinonoid intermediate. The relative destabilization of the quinonoid intermediate and external aldimine leads to the formation of large amounts of gem-diamine in reactions of N185A TPL with 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine and L-phenylalanine. For the reaction with 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine it was first possible to determine kinetic parameters of gem-diamine formation by the stopped-flow method. For the reactions of N185A TPL with substrates bearing good leaving groups the observed values of k(cat) could be accounted for by taking into consideration two effects: the decrease in the quinonoid content under steady-state conditions and the increase in the quinonoid reactivity in a beta-elimination reaction. Both effects are due to destabilization of the quinonoid and they counterbalance each other. Multiple kinetic isotope effect studies on the reactions of N185A TPL with suitable substrates, L-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine, show that the principal mechanism of catalysis, suggested previously for the wild-type enzyme, does not change. In the framework of this mechanism the observed considerable decrease in k(cat) values for reactions of N185A TPL with L-tyrosine and 3-fluoro-L-tyrosine may be ascribed to participation of Asn185 in additional stabilization of the keto quinonoid intermediate.  (+info)

Comparative studies on the properties of tryptophanase and tyrosine phenol-lyase immobilized directly on Sepharose or by use of Sepharose-bound pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. (4/33)

Tryptophanase from Escherichia coli B/qt 7-A and tyrosine phenol-lyase (beta-tyrosinase) from Escherichia intermedia were immobilized on Sepharose 4B by several direct coupling reactions or through pyridoxal 5'-phosphate previously bound to Sepharose. The most active preparation of immobilized tryptophanase was obtained by coupling tetrameric apoenzyme to pyridoxal-P bound on Sepharose at the 6-position through a diazo linkage. This immobilization procedure involves the formation to Schiff base linkage between 4-formyl group of Sepharose-bound pyridoxal-P and the epsilon-amino group of the lysine residue at the active center of one subunit of tetrameric apo-tryptophanase, followed by the fixation of the Schiff base linkage by reduction with NaBH4. In the case of beta-tyrosinase having two catalytic centers, however, this method was not so suitable as the case of tryptophanase. Direct coupling of the apoenzyme to CNBr-activated Sepharose or to a bromoacetyl derivative of Sepharose gave better results. In each case, the affinity for substrate or coenzyme was scarcely influenced by the immobilization. When used repeatedly in a batch system or continuously in a flow system in the absence of added pyridoxal-P, immobilized holo-tryptophanase of holo-beta-tyrosinase gradually lost its original activity; however, supplement of pyridoxal-P to the reaction system restored its initial activity. From the kinetic analyses of these phenomena, the rate constants of coenzyme dissociation from immobilized tryptophanase and beta-tyrosinase were calculated. Upon immobilization, the pH optima of both enzymes shifted 0.5 to 1.0 pH unit to the alkaline side. Both immobilized enzymes showed higher thermal stability and resistance to a denaturing agent such as guinidine-HCl than their free counterpart. Furthermore, the reactivity of sulfhydryl group of beta-tyrosinase, in connection with its coenzyme-binding property, was conveniently studied by use of the immobilized enzyme.  (+info)

Cloning and random mutagenesis of the Erwinia herbicola tyrR gene for high-level expression of tyrosine phenol-lyase. (5/33)

Tyrosine phenol-lyase (Tpl), which can synthesize 3, 4-dihydroxyphenylalanine from pyruvate, ammonia, and catechol, is a tyrosine-inducible enzyme. Previous studies demonstrated that the tpl promoter of Erwinia herbicola is activated by the TyrR protein of Escherichia coli. In an attempt to create a high-Tpl-expressing strain, we cloned the tyrR gene of E. herbicola and then randomly mutagenized it. Mutant TyrR proteins with enhanced ability to activate tpl were screened for by use of the lac reporter system in E. coli. The most increased transcription of tpl was observed for the strain with the mutant tyrR allele involving amino acid substitutions of alanine, cysteine, and glycine for valine-67, tyrosine-72, and glutamate-201, respectively. A tyrR-deficient derivative of E. herbicola was constructed and transformed with a plasmid carrying the mutant tyrR allele (V67A Y72C E201G substitutions). The resultant strain expressed Tpl without the addition of tyrosine to the medium and produced as much of it as was produced by the wild-type strain grown under tyrosine-induced conditions. The regulatory properties of the mutant TyrR(V67A), TyrR(Y72C), TyrR(E201G), and TyrR(V67A Y72C E201G) proteins were examined in vivo. Interestingly, as opposed to the wild-type TyrR protein, the mutant TyrR(V67A) protein had a repressive effect on the tyrP promoter in the presence of phenylalanine as the coeffector.  (+info)

Interaction of tyrosine phenol-lyase with phosphoroorganic analogues of substrate amino acids. (6/33)

The phosphinic analogues of tyrosine and pyruvate were first demonstrated to be substrates in the reactions of elimination and synthesis catalyzed by tyrosine phenol-lyase. Kinetic parameters of the enzymatic process were determined, and the first enzymic synthesis of an aminophosphinic acid was carried out. Replacement of the planar HOOC-group by the tetrahedral (HO)(O)PH-group in the substrate slightly affected its affinity for the enzyme but substantially diminished the conversion rate. For phosphonic analogues, containing (HO)2(O)P group, the affinity to the enzyme was decreased considerably while the conversion was completely prevented. Thus, the structural parameters of the acid group are important not only for the affinity for the enzyme, but also for the formation of the catalytically competent conformation of the active site.  (+info)

Crystals of tryptophan indole-lyase and tyrosine phenol-lyase form stable quinonoid complexes. (7/33)

The binding of substrates and inhibitors to wild-type Proteus vulgaris tryptophan indole-lyase and to wild type and Y71F Citrobacter freundii tyrosine phenol-lyase was investigated in the crystalline state by polarized absorption microspectrophotometry. Oxindolyl-lalanine binds to tryptophan indole-lyase crystals to accumulate predominantly a stable quinonoid intermediate absorbing at 502 nm with a dissociation constant of 35 microm, approximately 10-fold higher than that in solution. l-Trp or l-Ser react with tryptophan indole-lyase crystals to give, as in solution, a mixture of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates and gem-diamine and external aldimine intermediates, respectively. Different from previous solution studies (Phillips, R. S., Sundararju, B., & Faleev, N. G. (2000) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 122, 1008-1114), the reaction of benzimidazole and l-Trp or l-Ser with tryptophan indole-lyase crystals does not result in the formation of an alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate, suggesting that the crystal lattice might prevent a ligand-induced conformational change associated with this catalytic step. Wild-type tyrosine phenol-lyase crystals bind l-Met and l-Phe to form mixtures of external aldimine and quinonoid intermediates as in solution. A stable quinonoid intermediate with lambda(max) at 502 nm is accumulated in the reaction of crystals of Y71F tyrosine phenol-lyase, an inactive mutant, with 3-F-l-Tyr with a dissociation constant of 1 mm, approximately 10-fold higher than that in solution. The stability exhibited by the quinonoid intermediates formed both by wild-type tryptophan indole-lyase and by wild type and Y71F tyrosine phenol-lyase crystals demonstrates that they are suitable for structural determination by x-ray crystallography, thus allowing the elucidation of a key species of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-dependent enzyme catalysis.  (+info)

Threonine-124 and phenylalanine-448 in Citrobacter freundii tyrosine phenol-lyase are necessary for activity with L-tyrosine. (8/33)

Thr-124 and Phe-448 are located in the active site of Citrobacter freundii tyrosine phenol-lyase (TPL) near the phenol ring of a bound substrate analogue, 3-(4'-hydroxyphenyl)propionic acid [Sundararaju, Antson, Phillips, Demidkina, Barbolina, Gollnick, Dodson and Wilson (1997) Biochemistry 36, 6502-6510]. Thr-124 is replaced by Asp and Phe-448 is replaced by His in the crystal structure of a structurally similar enzyme, Proteus vulgaris tryptophan indole-lyase, which has 50% identical residues. Hence, Thr-124 and Phe-448 in TPL were mutated to Ala or Asp, and His, respectively, in order to probe the role of these residues in the reaction specificity for L-Tyr. These mutant enzymes have little or no beta-elimination activity with L-Tyr or 3-fluoro-L-Tyr as a substrate, but retain significant elimination activity with S-(o-nitrophenyl)-L-cysteine, S-alkyl-L-cysteines and beta-chloroalanine. Furthermore, the binding of L-Tyr and other non-substrate amino acids is not significantly affected by the mutations. The mutant TPLs form intermediates in rapid-scanning stopped-flow experiments with L-Phe, L-Tyr and L-Trp, similar to those seen with wild-type TPL. These results demonstrate that Thr-124 and Phe-448 are necessary for the reaction specificity of TPL for L-Tyr, and probably play a role in the elimination stage of the reaction mechanism. Thr-124 is within hydrogen-bonding distance of the phenolic group of the bound substrate, and may help to orientate the ring for beta-elimination to occur. Phe-448 may be important to allow the formation of the closed conformation during the reaction.  (+info)