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The Physical State Dependence of Carboxypeptidase Aalpha and Agamma Kinetics

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Specialty Science
Date 1974 Oct 1
PMID 4530272
Citations 5
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Abstract

Spectrochemical probes have demonstrated that the conformations of carboxypeptidase A (EC 3.4.12.2) differ in solution and in the crystalline state. Detailed kinetic studies of carboxypeptidase A(alpha) and A(gamma) crystals and solutions now show that the physical state of the enzyme is also a critical parameter that affects the function of the A(alpha) and A(gamma) enzymes in the same manner. The kinetic profiles and the corresponding kinetic constants of substrate hydrolysis are, therefore, important functional indices of the known conformational differences of the enzyme in these two physical states. The complex kinetic behavior of this enzyme, however, precludes meaningful comparisons of activity measurements for crystals and solutions obtained at only one substrate concentration. Underlying differences in varying substrate-inhibiting or -activating binding modes can result in either high or low activity ratios, concealing the true, functional consequences of the change in physical state. Thus, for all substrates examined, crystallization of the enzyme markedly reduces catalytic efficiency, k(cat), from 20- to 1000-fold. Equally as important, the substrate inhibition, apparent in solution for some di- and depsipeptides, is abolished with crystals, while for longer substrates the normal solution kinetics may acquire activation with the crystals. Hypothetical modes of substrate-enzyme interaction, generated by superimposing substrate models on the crystal structure of carboxypeptidase to simulate kinetics in solution, have failed to detect both of these changes, which affect inhibitory or activating binding modes. The only structure of carboxypeptidase yet published and that of its functionally inert complex with the pseudosubstrate, glycyl-L-tyrosine, derive from a unique form of carboxypeptidase A(alpha) crystals. These crystals differ from all others with regard both to their spectral properties and activity toward carbobenzoxy-glycyl-L-phenylalanine, which is 30% of that in solution, though the significance of this value cannot be gauged without knowledge of the relevant kinetic constants. The rapidly accumulating evidence for functional and conformational differences between crystals and solutions and the recent stress on the nonproductive aspects of the carboxypeptidase A(alpha)-glycyl-L-tyrosine complex, based on 30% site occupancy, suggest that the functional implications of its structural features require reevaluation.

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