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. 1997 Feb 25;36(8):1989-98.
doi: 10.1021/bi962623o.

Selective modification of alkylammonium ion specificity in trimethylamine dehydrogenase by the rational engineering of cation-pi bonding

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Selective modification of alkylammonium ion specificity in trimethylamine dehydrogenase by the rational engineering of cation-pi bonding

J Basran et al. Biochemistry. .

Abstract

In trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH), substrate is bound in the active site by organic cation-pi bonding mediated by residues Tyr-60, Trp-264, and Trp-355. In the closely related dimethylamine dehydrogenase (DMADH), modeling suggests that a mixture of cation-pi bonding and conventional hydrogen bonding is responsible for binding dimethylamine. The active sites of both enzymes are highly conserved, but three changes in amino acid identity (residues Tyr-60 --> Gln, Ser-74 --> Thr, and Trp-105 --> Phe, TMADH numbering) were identified as probable determinants for tertiary --> secondary alkylammonium ion specificity. In an attempt to switch the substrate specificity of TMADH so that the enzyme operates more efficiently with dimethylamine, three mutant proteins of TMADH were isolated. The mutant forms contained either a single mutation (Y60Q), double mutation (Y60Q x S74T) or triple mutation (Y60Q x S74T x W105F). A kinetic analysis in the steady state with trimethylamine and dimethylamine as substrate indicated that the specificity of the triple mutant was switched approximately 90,000-fold in favor of dimethylamine. The major component of this switch in specificity is a selective impairment of the catalytic efficiency of the enzyme with trimethylamine. Rapid-scanning and single wavelength stopped-flow spectroscopic studies revealed that the major effects of the mutations are on the rate of flavin reduction and the dissociation constant for substrate when trimethylamine is used as substrate. With dimethylamine as substrate, the rate constants for flavin reduction and the dissociation constants for substrate are not substantially affected in the mutant enzymes compared with wild-type TMADH. The results indicate a selective modification of the substrate-binding site in TMADH (that impairs catalysis with trimethylamine but not with dimethylamine) is responsible for the switch in substrate specificity displayed by the mutant enzymes.

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