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. 2004 Jun 25;279(26):26893-9.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M400958200. Epub 2004 Mar 29.

Magnesium-dependent ATPase activity and cooperativity of magnesium chelatase from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803

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Magnesium-dependent ATPase activity and cooperativity of magnesium chelatase from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803

James D Reid et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

The first committed step in chlorophyll biosynthesis is catalyzed by magnesium chelatase, a complex enzyme with at least three substrates, cooperative Mg(2+) activation, and free energy coupling between ATP hydrolysis and metal-ion chelation. A detailed functional study of the behavior of the intact magnesium chelatase has been performed, including characterization of magnesium cooperativity and the stoichiometry of ATP consumption in relation to the magnesium porphyrin produced. It is demonstrated that, in vitro, this catalyzed reaction requires hydrolysis of approximately 15 MgATP(2-) and that the chelation partial reaction is energetically unfavorable, under our assay conditions, with a DeltaG degrees ' of 25-33 kJ mol(-1). Given the likely metabolite concentrations in vivo, this results in the chelatase reaction operating far from equilibrium. We have also determined the steady-state kinetic behavior of the intact enzyme and have compared the kinetic parameters obtained with those observed for the partial reactions of individual subunits. K(DIX) (where D(IX) represents deuteroporphyrin IX) is estimated to be 3.20 microm, and K(MgATP)(2-) is 0.45 mm. k(cat) for chelation is estimated to be 0.8 min(-1), suggesting that the ATP hydrolysis catalyzed by the isolated ChlI subunit is substantially slower in the intact chelatase. The magnesium-rich form of the chelatase is a more effective catalyst of the chelation reaction; magnesium activation of the chelatase increases V, as well as the specificity constant for the reaction of MgATP(2-) and D(IX), possibly as a result of a magnesium-triggered conformational change.

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