Solvent isotope and mutagenesis studies on the proton relay system in yeast alcohol dehydrogenase 1.

Chem Biol Interact

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, 52242, USA. Electronic address:

Published: January 2024

Alcohol dehydrogenase catalyzes the reversible transfer of a hydride directly from an alcohol to the nicotinamide ring of NAD to form an aldehyde and NADH, and the proton from the alcohol probably is transferred through a hydrogen-bonded system to the imidazole of His-48. Studies of the pH dependencies, and solvent and substrate isotope effects on the wild-type and the enzyme with His-48 substituted with Gln-48 were used to demonstrate a role for the proton relay system. The H48Q substitution increases affinities for NAD and NADH by ∼2-fold, suggesting that the overall protein structure is maintained. In contrast, catalytic efficiencies (V/K) on ethanol and acetaldehyde and affinity for 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol are decreased by about 10-fold. The pH dependencies for catalytic efficiencies on ethanol and acetaldehyde (log V/K versus pH), show pK values of about 7.5 for wild-type enzyme, but ethanol oxidation by H48Q ADH is essentially linear over the pH range from 5.5 to 9.2 with a slope of 0.47. Steady-state kinetics and substrate isotope effects suggest that the kinetic mechanism of H48Q ADH has become partly random for oxidation of ethanol. Both wild-type and H48Q ADHs have pH-independent isotope effects for oxidation (V/K) of 1-butanol/1-butanol-d of 4, suggesting that hydride transfer is a major rate-limiting step. The pH dependence for butanol oxidation by wild type ADH shows a wavy profile over the pH range from pH 6 to 10, with a ∼2.3-fold larger V/K in DO than in HO, an "inverse" isotope effect. The substrate isotope effect of 4 is not altered by the solvent isotope effect, suggesting concerted proton/hydride transfer. The solvent isotope effect can be explained by a ground state with a water bound to the catalytic zinc in the enzyme-NAD complex, and a transition state that resembles a complex with NADH and aldehyde. In contrast, the H48Q enzyme has a diminished inverse solvent isotope effect of ∼1.3 and an essentially linear pH dependence with a slope of log V/K against pH of 0.49 for oxidation of 1-butanol, which together are consistent with a transition state where hydroxide ion directly accepts a proton from the 2'-hydroxyl group of the nicotinamide ribose in the proton relay system in the enzyme-NAD-alcohol complex. The results support a catalytic role for His-48 in the proton relay system.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10843573PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbi.2023.110853DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

solvent isotope
16
proton relay
16
relay system
16
substrate isotope
12
isotope effects
12
alcohol dehydrogenase
8
isotope
8
wild-type enzyme
8
catalytic efficiencies
8
ethanol acetaldehyde
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!