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. 1988 Apr 19;27(8):2956-9.
doi: 10.1021/bi00408a043.

Primary deuterium isotope effects for the 3-methylaspartase-catalyzed deamination of (2S)-aspartic acid, (2S,3S)-3-methylaspartic acid, and (2S,3S)-3-ethylaspartic acid

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Primary deuterium isotope effects for the 3-methylaspartase-catalyzed deamination of (2S)-aspartic acid, (2S,3S)-3-methylaspartic acid, and (2S,3S)-3-ethylaspartic acid

N P Botting et al. Biochemistry. .

Abstract

3-Methylaspartate ammonia-lyase catalyzes the deamination of (2S)-aspartic acid 137 times more slowly than the deamination of (2S,3S)-3-methylaspartic acid but catalyzes the amination of fumaric acid 1.8 times faster than the amination of mesaconic acid [Botting, N.P., Akhtar, M., Cohen, M. A., & Gani, D. (1988) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)]. In order to understand the mechanistic basis for these observations, the deamination reaction was examined kinetically with (2S)-aspartic acid, (2S,3S)-3-methylaspartic acid, (2S,3S)-3-ethylaspartic acid, and the corresponding C-3-deuteriated isotopomers. Comparison of the double-reciprocal plots of the initial reaction velocities for each of the three pairs of substrates revealed that the magnitude of the primary isotope effect on both Vmax and V/K varied with the substituent at C-3 of the substrate. 3-Methylaspartic acid showed the largest isotope effect (1.7 on Vmax and V/K), 3-ethylaspartic acid showed a smaller isotope effect (1.2 on Vmax and V/K), and aspartic acid showed no primary isotope effect at all. These results, which are inconsistent with earlier reports that there is no primary isotope effect for 3-methylaspartic acid [Bright, H. J. (1964) J. Biol. Chem. 239, 2307], suggest that for both 3-methylaspartic acid and 3-ethylaspartic acid elimination occurs via a predominantly concerted mechanism whereas for aspartic acid an E1cb mechanism prevails.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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