The NAD-glycohydrolase activity of the pertussis toxin S1 subunit. Involvement of the catalytic HIS-35 residue
- PMID: 8119996
The NAD-glycohydrolase activity of the pertussis toxin S1 subunit. Involvement of the catalytic HIS-35 residue
Abstract
Pertussis toxin is a member of ADP-ribosylating bacterial toxins that are capable of catalyzing the cleavage of the N-glycosidic bond of NAD+ and the transfer of its ADP-ribose moiety to G proteins. The catalytic S1 subunit of pertussis toxin uses signal transducing G proteins as acceptor substrates but can also catalyze the transfer of the ADP-ribose moiety to water in the absence of G proteins. Site-directed mutagenesis followed by kinetic analyses of truncated soluble mutant proteins revealed that His-35 of S1 is a catalytic residue because alterations of this residue affect the turnover rate of NAD-glycohydrolysis by approximately two orders of magnitude without significantly affecting substrate binding. Replacement of the imidazole of His-35 by the side chain of glutamine maintained the highest residual activity. The pH dependence of the enzyme activity showed only slight variations over the experimental range with an optimum at pH 7.5 and an approximate pKa of 6.5 to 7. This pH dependence was abolished by the Gln substitution, which still retained significant activity, suggesting that His-35 probably does not act as a true base but rather as a proton acceptor. Direct catalytic roles for several other residues were ruled out. Ser-52 substitutions resulted in slight alterations of both kcat and Km for NAD+ suggesting an involvement in maintaining the local geometry of the active site rather than a direct role in catalysis for this residue. Kinetic studies on mutants with substitutions of Ser-40 indicate a role in NAD+ binding for this residue. In conjunction with previous findings, these studies suggest that the NAD-glycohydrolase activity of S1 utilizes 2 catalytic residues, His-35 and the previously identified Glu-129. The enzyme mechanism could therefore proceed through an activation by polarization of the acceptor substrate water or G protein by His-35, and the stabilization of an oxocarbonium-like transition state intermediate by Glu-129.
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