Abstract
Yeast flavocytochrome b2 catalyzes the oxidation of lactate to pyruvate; because of the wealth of structural and mechanistic information available, this enzyme has served as the model for the family of flavoproteins catalyzing oxidation of α-hydroxy acids. Primary deuterium and solvent isotope effects have now been used to analyze the effects of mutating the active site residue Tyr254 to phenylalanine. Both the Vmax and the V/Klactate values decrease about 40-fold in the mutant enzyme. The primary deuterium isotope effects on the Vmax and the V/K lactate values increase to 5.0, equivalent to the intrinsic isotope effect for the wild-type enzyme. In addition, both the Vmax and the V/Klactate values exhibit solvent isotope effects of 1.5. Measurement of the solvent isotope effect with deuterated lactate establishes that the primary and solvent isotope effects arise from the same chemical step, consistent with concerted cleavage of the lactate OH and CH bonds. The pH dependence of the mutant enzyme is not significantly different from that of the wild-type enzyme; this is most consistent with a requirement that the side chain of Tyr254 be uncharged for catalysis. The results support a hydride transfer mechanism for the mutant protein and, by extension, wild-type flavocytochrome b2 and the other flavoproteins catalyzing oxidation of α-hydroxy acids.
Recommended Citation
P. Sobrado and P. F. Fitzpatrick, "Solvent and Primary Deuterium Isotope Effects Show that Lactate CH and OH Bond Cleavages Are Concerted in Y254F Flavocytochrome B2, Consistent with a Hydride Transfer Mechanism," Biochemistry, vol. 42, no. 51, pp. 15208 - 15214, American Chemical Society, Dec 2003.
The definitive version is available at https://doi.org/10.1021/bi035546n
Department(s)
Chemistry
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
0006-2960
Document Type
Article - Journal
Document Version
Citation
File Type
text
Language(s)
English
Rights
© 2024 American Chemical Society, All rights reserved.
Publication Date
30 Dec 2003
PubMed ID
14690431
Comments
National Institute of General Medical Sciences, Grant R01GM058698