𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Association of the catalytic subunit of aspartate transcarbamoylase with a zinc-containing polypeptide fragment of the regulatory chain leads to increases in thermal stability

✍ Scribed by Cynthia B. Peterson; Bin-Bing Zhou; Durwynne Hsieh; Angela N.H. Creager; H. K. Schachman


Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
788 KB
Volume
3
Category
Article
ISSN
0961-8368

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The regulatory enzyme aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase), comprising 2 catalytic (C) trimers and 3 regulatory (R) dimers, owes its stability to the manifold interchain interactions among the 12 polypeptide chains. With the availability of a recombinant 70‐amino acid zinc‐containing polypeptide fragment of the regulatory chain of ATCase, it has become possible to analyze directly the interaction between catalytic and regulatory chains in a complex of simpler structure independent of other interactions such as those between the 2 C trimers, which also contribute to the stability of the holoenzyme. Also, the effect of the interaction between the polypeptide, termed the zinc domain, and the C trimer on the thermal stability and other properties can be measured directly. Differential scanning microcalorimetry experiments demonstrated that the binding of the zinc domain to the C trimer leads to a complex of markedly increased thermal stability. This was shown with a series of mutant forms of the C trimer, which themselves varied greatly in their temperature of denaturation due to single amino acid replacements. With some C trimers, for which t~m~ varied over a range of 30 °C due to diverse amino acid substitutions, the elevation of t~m~ resulting from the interaction with the zinc domain was as large as 18 °C. The values of t~m~ for a variety of complexes of mutant C trimers and the wild‐type zinc domain were similar to those observed when the holoenzymes containing the mutant C trimers were subjected to heat denaturation. In an extreme case with a mutant form involving replacement of Glu 86 by Ala in the catalytic chains, this was manifested by a change in t~m~ for the trimer of 44.6 °C to 64.6 °C for the holoenzyme. These results contribute to our understanding of an earlier observation that scanning calorimetry on wild‐type ATCase gave 2 transitions, with the high temperature peak, which is assigned to melting of C trimers, exhibiting a higher t~m~ than isolated C trimer. The effect of the zinc domain on the t~m~ of the complex with C trimer provides an explanation for this increase in thermal stability, i.e., during heat denaturation of the holoenzyme, the C trimer is still associated with the folded zinc domain fragments of regulatory chains.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


A 70-amino acid zinc-binding polypeptide
✍ Bin-Bing Zhou; Grover L. Waldrop; Lawrence Lum; H. K. Schachman 📂 Article 📅 2008 🏛 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 🌐 English ⚖ 873 KB

## Abstract Interaction between a 70‐amino acid and zinc‐binding polypeptide from the regulatory chain and the catalytic (C) trimer of aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase) leads to dramatic changes in enzyme activity and affinity for active site ligands. The hypothesis that the complex between a C