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UDP-galactose4-epimerasefrom Kluyveromyces
fragilis –catalyticsitesofthehomodimeric enzyme
are functionaland regulated
Amrita Brahma*, Nupur Banerjee* and Debasish Bhattacharyya
Structural Biology and Bioinformatics Division, Indian Institute of Chemical Biology (CSIR), Jadavpur, Kolkata, India
Introduction
UDP-galactose 4-epimerase, hereafter called epimerase,
is an essential and ubiquitous enzyme that reversibly
converts UDP-Gal to UDP-Glc. The epimerase from
the yeast Kluyveromycesfragilis is a homodimer of
nearly 75 kDa per subunit, and contains bound
NAD
+
acting as cofactor [1–3]. Epimerases from Esc-
herichia coli [4–6], Saccharomyces cerevisiae [7] and
human sources [8] have been cloned and sequenced,
and their X-ray crystallographic structures are known.
The bacterial enzyme has two NAD
+
-binding sites
Keywords
catalytic sites; inhibitor; multimeric enzyme;
regulation; UDP-galactose 4-epimerase
Correspondence
D. Bhattacharyya, Structural Biology and
Bioinformatics Division, Indian Institute of
Chemical Biology (CSIR), 4, Raja S. C.
Mallick Road, Jadavpur, Kolkata 700 032,
India
Fax: +91 33 2473 5197 ⁄ 0284
Tel: +91 33 2499 5764
E-mail: debasish@iicb.res.in
*These authors contributed equally to this
work
(Received 20 July 2009, revised 20 August
2009, accepted 16 September 2009)
doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.07386.x
UDP-galactose 4-epimerasefromKluyveromycesfragilis is a homodimer
containing one catalytic site and one NAD
+
as cofactor per subunit. One
5¢-UMP, a competitive inhibitor, binds per dimer of epimerase as isolated
and causes inactivation. Addition of 0.2 mm inhibitor to theenzyme in vitro
leads to three sequential steps: first, the inhibitor binds to the unoccupied
site; second, the inhibitor bound ex vivo is displaced allosterically; and
finally, both sitesare occupied by the inhibitor. These reactions have been
monitored by kinetic lag in substrate conversion, coenzyme fluorescence,
protection against trypsin digestion, and reductive inhibition. The transi-
tion profiles indicate the existence of a stable intermediate with one inhibi-
tor-binding site remaining unoccupied. Reductive inhibition of this
intermediate reduced the activity to 58% ± 2%, with modification of one
catalytic site. A change of conformation ofthe epimerase upon binding
with substrate or inhibitor was evident from fluorescence emission spectra.
The epimerase demonstrated a biphasic Michaelis–Menten dependency.
The epimerase devoid of 5¢-UMP showed a Michaelis–Menten dependency
that can be explained by assuming simultaneous operation of two catalytic
sites. A monomeric form ofthe epimerase was devoid of such regulation.
The inhibitory profile of 5¢-UMP also suggested negative cooperativity.
Incubation ofthe epimerase with combinations of substrate analogs ren-
dered one ofthesites inactive, supporting the presence of two functional
and regulatedcatalytic sites. Dissimilar kinetic patterns ofthe reconstituted
enzyme after treatment with p-chloromercuribenzoate indicated stability of
the dimeric enzyme against fast association–dissociation, which could
otherwise generate multiple forms oftheenzyme with functional
heterogeneity.
Abbreviations
CHD, 1,2-cyclohexanedione; GG, glycylglycine; pCMB, p-chloromercuribenzoate; STI, soybean trypsin inhibitor.
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 6725
away fromthe subunit contact region, and its mono-
mers arefunctional [9].
The molecular mass ofthe yeast enzyme is almost
double that ofthe bacterial and human epimerases. A
blast search ofthe yeast epimerase revealed two fea-
tures: its N-terminal half showed strong homology
with the E. coli epimerase, andthe C-terminal half
showed homology with mutarotase [10]. The predicted
mutarotase activity in K. fragilis epimerase was later
demonstrated [11,12]. Furthermore, theenzyme can be
cleaved by trypsin into two parts in the presence of
epimerase and mutarotase inhibitors. They can func-
tion independently as an epimerase and a mutarotase
[11]. Interestingly, when trypsin digestion is performed
in the presence of only the epimerase inhibitor, the
mutarotase domain is fragmented, yielding a 45 kDa
monomeric epimerase [11,13].
The yeast enzyme exhibits a stoichiometry of two
NAD
+
molecules per dimer, similarly to E. coli and
human epimerase, raising the possibility ofthe exis-
tence of two catalytic sites. Binding of one molecule of
nondialyzable 5¢-UMP, a competitive inhibitor, renders
the enzyme inactive. This led to the assumption that
there is regulation between thecatalytic sites. Func-
tionality could be restored after replacement of the
inhibitor by a substrate [14]. Therefore, either the
unbound site is nonfunctional or the bound inhibitor
regulates its functionality. The second possibility is
favored, as there is evidence that the activities of many
metabolic enzymes are controlled in vivo. In the pres-
ence of excess 5¢-UMP in vitro, the epimerase is com-
pletely inactivated, signifying that the inhibitor blocks
its two catalyticsites [15].
The background literature on epimerase shows that
the nature of binding of 5¢-UMP in vivo and in vitro is
different. First, the inhibitor bound as isolated, but
not the one bound in vitro, shows a kinetic lag in
catalysis [14]. Second, for removal of a nondialyzable
inhibitor by its own counterpart added extraneously,
there must be another binding site ofthe inhibitor in
the enzyme. This site is presumably the second cata-
lytic site. This observation supports the idea that the
stoichiometry of bound 5¢-UMP ex vivo is indeed £ 1
per dimer. As the externally added inhibitor interacts
specifically at the unoccupied binding site, a long-range
interaction between the occupied and unoccupied sites
is predicted (Scheme 1). Third, there is an arginine at
the catalytic site of epimerase that can be modified by
Scheme 1. Proposed model of conversion of E
1
to E
4
.E
1
, epimerase containing one 5¢ -UMP per dimer bound as isolated (native epimer-
ase); [E
2
], an intermediate ofthe conversion where the unoccupied 5¢-UMP-binding site of E
1
is occupied by the added 5¢-UMP (the bracket
indicates its transient character); E
3
, stable intermediate where the 5¢-UMP bound ex vivo to E
1
is replaced allosterically by the added
5¢-UMP; E
4
, epimerase where both the 5¢-UMP binding sitesare occupied by added 5¢-UMP; [E
2A
], product of reductive inhibition of [E
2
] with
L(+)-arabinose (the bracket indicates uncertainty about its existence); E
3A
, product of reductive inhibition of [E
3
] with L(+)-arabinose. The two
lobes in all the structures indicate homodimeric epimerase; the flange at the middle of each lobe separates the epimerase (upper) and
mutarotase (lower) domains of a monomer; the rectangular denting ofthe upper domains of each lobe indicates the binding site of 5¢-UMP
ex vivo; the shaded rectangle indicates 5¢-UMP bound as isolated; the open rectangle indicates added 5¢-UMP;
•
, NAD
+
, , NADH, s,
arginine at the active site; s over the 5¢-UMP binding site indicates protection against trypsinization; circumference ofthe lobe next to the
site indicates susceptibility to the protease; +UMP and –UMP indicate its association and dissociation; the arrow on the top ofthe scheme
indicates the direction of 5¢-UMP-dependent conversion of epimerase. The symmetrical pattern ofthe dimeric enzyme as shown is a
working model only.
Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase A. Brahma et al.
6726 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
1,2-cyclohexanedione (CHD), leading to inactivation
[15]. Whereas 5¢-UMP added in vitro could completely
protect the arginine from modification, the inhibitor
bound ex vivo is incapable of doing so [16]. Fourth,
degradation of epimerase by trypsin is initiated from
the arginine ofthecatalytic site, leading to further
unraveling ofthe molecule [11]. Trypsin digestion of
epimerase could be completely prevented if the said
arginine were protected by 5¢-UMP in vitro. However,
the inhibitor bound ex vivo is incapable of preventing
trypsin digestion [15]. Fifth, 5¢-UMP bound ex vivo
does not participate in reductive inhibition (‘reductive
inhibition’ is a specific reaction whereby epimerase
bound NAD
+
, acting as cofactor, is reduced to
NADH in the presence of 5¢-UMP, a competitive
inhibitor, and l(+)-arabinose, a reducing sugar, lead-
ing to complete inactivation oftheenzyme [24] –
NAD
+
as free nucleotide or bound to other enzymes
is not sensitive to this reaction), whereas the inhibitor
bound in vitro does [14].
Here, we provide a hypothesis for the pathway fol-
lowed by epimerase as isolated (E
1
) during its satura-
tion with extraneously added 0.5 mm 5¢-UMP (E
4
)
(Scheme 1). An essential feature in this proposal is that
the nature ofthe binding of 5¢-UMP in E
1
and that in
E
4
are different, evidence for which has been men-
tioned above. On the basis ofthe situation in
Scheme 1, the minimum requirement for the conver-
sion is the existence of two intermediates, E
2
and E
3
.
In E
1
, one inhibitor-binding site is occupied and the
other is vacant. In E
2
, the added 5¢-UMP binds to the
unoccupied site of E
1
.InE
3
, the added inhibitor has
removed the 5¢-UMP bound ex vivo by allostericity. A
higher concentration ofthe inhibitor leads to the final
product E
4
Thus, the model predicts that, in E
3
, the
inhibitor occupies the high-affinity site, leaving the
low-affinity site vacant. In summary, the conversion
involves three steps: association of added inhibitor at
low concentration; dissociation ofthe inhibitor bound
ex vivo; and, finally, association of added inhibitor at
the unoccupied site (Scheme 1).
Theoretical considerations predict that E
2
should
exist only as a transient intermediate. If E
2
is stable, it
will prevent the spontaneous formation of E
3
.AsE
2
has no additional 5¢-UMP-binding site, its conversion
to E
3
should be independent of added 5¢-UMP. A cor-
ollary ofthe prediction is that half ofthecatalytic sites
of E
1
and E
3
remain bound to 5¢-UMP, whereas both
of thecatalyticsites in E
2
and E
4
are occupied by the
inhibitor. Thus, after incubation with trypsin, the
residual activities of E
1
,E
2
(if it exists), E
3
and E
4
are
expected to be 0%, 50%, 50% and 100%, respectively,
on the basis of selective protection by the added inhib-
itor. Similarly, the formation of NADH and residual
activity after reductive inhibition in the presence of
only l(+)-arabinose for these enzyme–inhibitor com-
plexes are expected to be 0, 1, 1 and 2 mol per dimer
and 100%, 50%, 50% and 0%, respectively. To be
more precise, as thecatalyticsitesare supposed to be
regulated, inactivation of E
2
and E
3
after trypsiniza-
tion or reductive inhibition leading to E
2A
and E
3A
(Scheme 1) may not be exactly 50%.
While supporting Scheme 1, two physical properties
of epimerase have been established. These arethe stoi-
chiometry of bound cofactor NAD
+
being two per
dimer, andthe stability of its dimeric structure with
regard to fast dissociation–association. In the absence
of this information, Scheme 1 is not valid. Subse-
quently, we verified whether the Michaelis–Menten
relationship is or is not maintained by the enzyme.
When product inhibition and secondary reactions
are not applicable for an enzyme, its deviation from
the Michaelis–Menten relationship is a strong indication
of allosteric regulation. Specific inactivation of one
catalytic site of epimerase with substrate analogs has
also been investigated to provide supportive evidence.
Results
Stoichiometry of bound NAD
+
Conversion of NAD
+
to NADH by reductive inhibi-
tion of epimerase offered a sensitive method for deter-
mination of stoichiometry ofthe bound cofactor.
Reductive inhibition was applied to 33.3 nmol (5 mg)
of epimerase. A control set oftheenzyme under identi-
cal conditions but in the absence ofthe reducing
agents [5¢-UMP and l(+)-arabinose] retained 98% of
the activity. Complete inactivation ofthe enzyme
ensured quantitative reduction of NAD
+
to NADH.
Dissociation of NADH fromtheenzyme was achieved
with 8 m urea [17], and was quantified spectrofluori-
metrically. Recovery of NADH was 63.0 ± 4.0 nmol,
yielding a stoichiometry of 1.89 ± 0.12 per dimer, or
close to 1.0 NADH per subunit (n = 4). Further
improvement in quantification was restricted by the
uncertainty of protein concentration determination and
the incompleteness of conversion of NAD
+
to NADH.
Therefore, with respect to the composition of cofactor,
the catalyticsitesof epimerase remain indistinguish-
able.
Stability of subunits
According to Scheme 1, the subunits of epimerase (E
1
)
are asymmetric, ofthe type a:b, on the basis of bind-
A. Brahma et al. Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 6727
ing of 5¢-UMP. Epimerase exists as a stable dimer [18],
but this does not exclude fast association–dissociation
of the dimer, leading to three types offunctional entity
(Eqn 1). Depending on the magnitude ofthe rate con-
stants involved, there might be undetectable amounts
of the monomers at equilibrium. Thus, noncompliance
with the Michaelis–Menten relationship of epimerase,
as described later, might originate from heterogeneity
of theenzyme without regulatory behavior.
2a : b Ð 2a þ 2b Ð a : a þ b : b ð1Þ
To check this, epimerase was treated with p-chloro-
mercuribenzoate (pCMB), leading to inactivation and
dissociation ofthe subunits without denaturation.
Functionality was restored with reconstitution of the
dimeric structure after reduction ofthe modified
enzyme with dithiothreitol and NAD
+
[19]. The dura-
tions of kinetic lag of catalysis for 0.004 units of native
and reconstituted epimerase were found to be 83 s and
17 s, respectively, whereas the rates of substrate con-
version in the steady state were very similar, being
2.52 lmol and 2.63 lmol of UDP-Gal per min, respec-
tively (Fig. 1A). Furthermore, the Michaelis–Menten
patterns ofthe native and reconstituted epimerase were
constructed and were found to be entirely different
(Fig. 1B). The kinetic features ofthe native enzyme
remained unchanged when theenzyme was incubated
in the assay mixture without the substrate for 30 min
at 25 °C prior to activity measurements. These obser-
vations collectively indicate that epimerase does not
undergo rapid exchange of subunits during catalysis.
Characterization of epimerase–inhibitor
complexes
The equilibrium intermediates formed during conver-
sion ofthe inhibitor complex E
1
to E
4
in the presence
of 0–0.6 mm 5¢-UMP were characterized by a kinetic
lag in catalysis, ‘coenzyme fluorescence’ (described
later), and inactivation by trypsin (Fig. 2A), and two
other parameters of reductive inhibition, namely inacti-
vation and formation of NADH (Fig. 2B). The last
two parameters are sensitive enough to be measured
with an accuracy of ± 0.25%.
The dependency ofthe lag in catalysis followed a
sharp decrease of 100% to 10% ± 2% in the presence
of 0–0.2 mm 5¢-UMP. This indicated removal of the
inhibitor bound as isolated in E
1
or modification of
the inhibitor-binding site. A corresponding conforma-
tional change at the cofactor-binding site was moni-
tored from coenzyme fluorescence. There was an initial
25% rise in emission intensity in the presence of
0–0.2 mm 5¢-UMP. The intensity gradually returned to
its original value in the presence of 0.5 mm inhibitor.
The maximum emission was seen in the presence of
0.15 mm 5¢-UMP, which corresponded closely to the
transition midpoint of abolition ofthe kinetic lag. In
the case of inactivation by trypsin, the profile distinctly
indicated the existence of a stable intermediate between
0.1 mm and 0.2 mm ofthe inhibitor. This intermediate
retained 58% ± 2% ofthe residual activity, indicating
that the added inhibitor could protect half of the
catalytic sites, as expected for E
3
. All transitions were
A
B
Fig. 1. Differences in catalytic properties of native and reconsti-
tuted epimerase after dissociation with pCMB. (A) Pre-steady-state
kinetics of 0.004 units of native (1) and reconstituted (2) epimerase.
The horizontal dotted lines indicate initial absorbance of native (1)
and reconstituted (2) epimerase. Durations of initial lag of catalysis
are indicated by vertical dotted lines. The parallel nature of curves 1
and 2 indicate that, at steady state, thecatalytic efficiencies of the
two forms of epimerase are equal. (B) Michaelis–Menten plots of
native (s—s) and reconstituted (
•
—
•
) epimerase. The bar indi-
cates variation of results (n = 3). Results for the native epimerase
are elaborated in Fig. 5. Inset: Lineweaver–Burk plot ofthe recon-
stituted epimerase. Units ofthe ordinate and abscissa are lmolÆ-
min
)1
and mM
)1
, respectively; values correspond to the original
plot.
Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase A. Brahma et al.
6728 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
completed with 0.5 mm 5¢-UMP, as higher concentra-
tions ofthe inhibitor failed to cause additional change
(Fig. 2A).
Proteolysis of native epimerase by trypsin is initiated
from an arginine residue located at thecatalytic site
[11]. The degradation can be prevented either by modi-
fication of this residue by CHD or by incubation with
5mm 5¢-UMP [16]. 5¢-UMP can protect E
4
against
trypsin, but not E
1
. Furthermore, as the arginine at
the catalytic site of E
1
does not appear to be protected
by 5¢-UMP, the amino acid could be modified by
CHD, which in turn is expected to resist trypsin diges-
tion. SDS ⁄ PAGE of CHD-modified E
1
showed genera-
tion of a stable 45 kDa fragment after trypsin
digestion, which was presumably the N-terminal
domain ofthe epimerase (Fig. 2A, inset). Thus, suscep-
tibilities of different epimerase–UMP complexes to
trypsin may be used to follow interactions ofthe inhib-
itor at thecatalytic site.
The protective effect of 5¢-UMP against modification
of the arginine located at thecatalytic site by CHD
was similar to that observed for trypsin digestion.
Native epimerase was modified by CHD in the pres-
ence of 0, 0.1–0.2 and 0.5–1.0 mm 5¢-UMP, and the
excess reagent was removed with a spin column. The
results showed that, in these ranges, the enzymes were
inactivated by 95% ± 5%, 48% ± 2%, and
8% ± 3%, respectively. This accords with the idea
that externally added 5¢-UMP can protect the said
arginine against modification but the inhibitor bound
ex vivo is unable to do so, which is consistent with
Scheme 1.
The existence of an isolable intermediate in the con-
version of E
1
to E
4
was also indicated by the profiles
generated from reductive inhibition of E
1
in the pres-
ence of 0–0.5 mm 5¢-UMP and 10 mml(+)-arabinose
(Fig. 2B). These clearly indicate a three-state transition
with a stable intermediate in the presence of 0.1–
0.2 mm 5¢-UMP. Formation of E
3A
from E
3
represents
the reductive inhibition ofthe stable intermediate. This
intermediate possesses residual activity of 58% ± 2%
as compared with E
1
, and NADH fluorescence of
63% ± 2% as compared with E
4
. The NADH fluores-
cence was measured under denaturing conditions to
remove interference from coenzyme fluorescence. This
indicated that under the defined conditions of reduc-
tive inhibition, one ofthe two NAD
+
molecules of the
dimeric enzyme was converted to NADH. In control
experiments, it was verified that the reagents carried
over to the assay mixture did not cause inactivation of
the coupled enzyme. Therefore, the results of
Fig. 2A,B are in agreement with Scheme 1.
Irreversible conversion
If the conversion of Scheme 1 were reversible, the
enzyme–inhibitor complexes would become unstable
while the excess inhibitor was removed. The complexes
E
3
and E
4
were dialyzed extensively against 50 mm
A
B
Fig. 2. Dependence of physicochemical properties of native epim-
erase (0.25–0.5 mgÆmL
)1
) in the presence of 0–6 mM added
5¢-UMP at pH 8.0. (A) The kinetic lag in converting UDP-Gal to
UDP-Glc was followed. Coenzyme fluorescence was measured
without dilution. Inactivation by trypsin was followed from residual
epimerase activity after protease digestion for 4 h under the stipu-
lated conditions. Results are expressed by taking activity of the
native epimerase as 100%. Inset: SDS ⁄ PAGE of epimerase (20 lg)
digested with trypsin (50 : 1, w ⁄ w) at pH 8.0 and at 4 °C. Lane 1:
after 30 s of protease pulse. Lane 2: after 4 h of protease pulse.
Lane 3: in the presence of 5 m
M 5¢-UMP for 4 h. Lane 4: as lane 2,
except that the epimerase used was modified by CHD. The upper
and lower arrows indicate the positions of BSA (66 kDa) and
ovalbumin (45 kDa) in the electrogram. (B) Reductive inhibition was
performed with 5 m
ML(+)-arabinose for 1 h at 25 °C, in the
presence of varying concentrations of 5¢-UMP. Fluorescence was
measured after treatment with 8
M urea (n = 2–3). In all measure-
ments, baseline correction was performed.
A. Brahma et al. Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 6729
sodium phosphate (pH 7.5) at 4 °C to remove
unbound inhibitor. It was verified that the native epim-
erase (E
1
) could withstand inactivation due to dialysis
under such conditions. The presence of 5¢-UMP in all
of the dialyzed samples was confirmed by MS analysis
(Fig. 3). The dialyzed enzyme complexes were sub-
jected to reductive inhibition in the presence of 10 mm
l(+)-arabinose. The residual activities of E
1
,E
3
and
E
4
were 80% ± 5%, 55% ± 5% and 8% ± 5%,
respectively (n = 2). The kinetic lag in catalysis as
observed with E
1
could not be reproduced with the
dialyzed samples of E
3
and E
4.
This indicated that the
inhibitor-binding steps are irreversible.
Change in tertiary structure
A change in conformation of an enzyme is an obligatory
requirement for regulation of its activity. In epimerase,
one of four tryptophans per subunit is located at the
catalytic site [20]. Thus, perturbation ofthe catalytic
sites is likely to be reflected in the fluorescence spectra
of its tryptophans (excitation at 295 nm). The change of
conformation of epimerase during its interaction with
0–0.6 mm 5¢-UMP and 0–0.4 mm UDP-Gal for 5 min
at 25 °C in two separate experimental sets was followed.
The substrate served as a catalytic site-directed ligand.
As compared with the native enzyme, the maximum
emission ofthe treated samples remained unaltered, at
343.8 ± 0.5 nm, indicating retention ofthe micro-
environment ofthe tryptophans. However, in the
presence of maximum concentrations of 5¢-UMP and
UDP-Gal as applied in this study, the emission intensity
was reduced by 12% ± 2% and 17% ± 2%, respec-
tively, indicating conformational change (Fig. 4A,B).
Application of higher concentrations ofthe inhibitor or
the substrate could not alter the extent of quenching.
The conformers also attained equilibrium, as no
further change in emission intensity was observed with
increasing incubation period.
Kinetic patterns
To investigate whether thecatalyticsitesof epimerase
are distinguishable on the basis of turnover, three
forms ofthe enzyme, namely dimeric native epimerase
(E
1
), dimeric inhibitor free epimerase (E
0
), and mono-
meric epimerase (E
M
), were used for kinetic analysis in
the presence of 0–0.35 mm substrate (Figs 5–7).
Fig. 3. MS analysis ofthe dissociated ligand of native epimerase. The observed peaks have been assigned as follows: 5¢-UMP, 2Na
+
,
H
+
= 369.1 (obs. 368.99); 5¢-UMP, 2Na
+
,2H
+
= 370.1 (obs. 369.87); 5¢-UMP, 3Na
+
= 391.1 (obs. 390.96); and 5¢-UMP, 3Na
+
,H
+
= 392.1
(obs. 391.87). Commercially available 5¢-UMP-disodium salt, under similar experimental conditions, showed an identical mass pattern. The
spectral zone of NAD
+
has not been included.
Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase A. Brahma et al.
6730 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
Regulation ofcatalytic activity has been clearly dem-
onstrated in the case ofthe native epimerase. The
Michaelis–Menten relationship showed hyperbolic
dependencies in the substrate concentration ranges
0–0.075 mm and 0.2–0.35 mm, whereas there was no
significant variation of reaction rate between 0.075 mm
and 0.2 mm (Fig. 5). Thus, the low-affinity site (the
high-affinity and low-affinity sitesof epimerase referred
to in the text are related to the substrate UDP-Gal –
A
B
Fig. 5. Michaelis–Menten plot of native epimerase with UDP-Gal
as substrate. Theenzyme concentration was 3.3 n
M. (A, B) Linewe-
aver–Burk plots with 0–0.05 m
M and 0.2–0.35 mM substrate. Units
of the ordinate and abscissa are lmolÆmin
)1
and mM
)1
, respec-
tively; values correspond to the original plot. Derived values of K
m
and V
max
are presented in Table 1. Solid and hatched bars
represent the presence of bound 5¢-UMP ex vivo andthe gradual
disappearance ofthe initial lag of catalysis, respectively.
A
B
Fig. 4. Change of conformation of native epimerase in the pres-
ence of (A) 0–0.6 m
M 5¢-UMP and (B) 0–0.4 mM UDP-Gal. The
emission intensity of native epimerase is considered to be 100% in
either set. The ligands had no emission in this spectral zone.
AB
Fig. 6. Michaelis–Menten plot of inhibitor-free epimerase with
UDP-Gal as substrate. Theenzyme concentration was 1.65 n
M. The
open circles (s—s) indicate experimentally observed points. (A, B)
Lineweaver–Burk plots with 0–0.05 m
M and 0.05–0.35 mM sub-
strate. Units ofthe ordinate and abscissa are lmolÆmin
)1
and
m
M
)1
, respectively; values correspond to the original plot. Derived
values of K
m
and V
max
are presented in Table 1. The line (
•
—
•
)
was constructed according to Eqn (2), using the parameters of
Table 1. The other line is the best fit joining the experimentally
observed points (s—s).
Fig. 7. Michaelis–Menten plot of monomeric epimerase with
UDP-Gal as substrate. Inset: Lineweaver–Burk plot with 0–0.35 m
M
substrate. Units ofthe ordinate and abscissa are lmolÆmin
)1
and
m
M
)1
, respectively; values correspond to the original plot. The
enzyme concentration was 0.5 n
M. Derived values of K
m
and V
max
are presented in Table 1.
A. Brahma et al. Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 6731
high-affinity and low-affinity sitesof 5¢-UMP have no
relationship with the corresponding UDP-Gal-binding
sites) became functional at a substrate concentration
much higher than that required for saturation of the
high-affinity site. Lineweaver–Burk plots were con-
structed for the two dependencies (Fig. 5A,B). Derived
K
m
and V
max
values were 0.01 mm and 2.88 lmolÆ
min
)1
Æmg
)1
for the high-affinity site, and 1.0 mm and
5.56 lmolÆmin
)1
Æmg
)1
for the low-affinity site, respec-
tively. The presence of 5¢-UMP bound to the enzyme
as isolated was detected fromthe kinetic lag in cataly-
sis andthe characteristic MS pattern. When these anal-
yses were performed, theenzyme was incubated with
variable concentrations ofthe substrate for 1 min
under the assay conditions, and was passed through a
spin column to separate unbound ligands from the
eluted enzyme. It was observed that, in the presence of
up to 0.06 mm UDP-Gal, the inhibitor remained
bound to theenzyme (Fig. 5, solid and hatched bars).
Thus, thecatalytic site ofthe native epimerase, which
was free ofthe inhibitor, was nonfunctional at low
substrate concentrations.
In the case of inhibitor-free epimerase, the depen-
dency of reaction velocity on substrate concentration
cannot be represented by a single Michaelis–Menten
relationship over the range of substrate concentrations
used, because the corresponding Lineweaver–Burk plot
had a poor correlation (R
2
= 0.8473, where R
2
is the
regression coefficient). However, when two Linewe-
aver–Burk plots were constructed for 0–0.02 mm and
0.05–0.2 mm substrate, a significant improvement in
linear dependency was observed, R
2
being 0.960 and
0.999, respectively. These yielded K
m
and V
max
values
of 0.011 mm and 2.08 lmolÆmin
)1
mg
)1
for the high-
affinity site, and 0.178 mm and 1.76 lmolÆmin
)1
Æmg
)1
for the low-affinity site, respectively (Fig. 6A,B). It is
noteworthy that the Lineweaver–Burk plot for the
high-affinity site showed a downward curvature at a
higher substrate concentration (Fig. 6A). This is an
indication ofthe presence of a second operational site
of low efficiency; otherwise, the plot would follow the
linear trend [21]. It has been calculated that the low-
affinity site contributed at most 10% towards the turn-
over efficiency in the presence of 0.02 mm UDP-Gal.
The Michaelis–Menten relationship ofthe mono-
meric epimerase showed hyperbolic dependency and a
linear Lineweaver–Burk plot between 0 mm and
0.35 mm UDP-Gal. Derived K
m
and V
max
values were
0.01 mm and 2.52 lmolÆmin
)1
Æmg
)1
, respectively, sug-
gesting that thecatalytic site was similar to the high-
affinity site ofthe native and inhibitor-free epimerase
(Fig. 7 and inset). All kinetic parameters are summa-
rized in Table 1.
Assessment of kinetic data
When the epimerase reaction did not show a Michaelis–
Menten relationship, it was assumed that the cata-
lytic sites were operating simultaneously at unequal
efficiencies. Under such conditions, the rate of an
enzyme reaction (V) can be expressed as the sum of two
Michaelis–Menten dependencies, as in Eqn (2) [21].
V ¼
V
max ðHÞ
½S
K
m ðHÞ
þ½S
þ
V
max ðLÞ
½S
K
m ðLÞ
þ½S
ð2Þ
where the subscripts H and L refer to high-affinity and
low-affinity sites for the substrate. V
max
of the enzyme
was obtained fromthe Lineweaver–Burk plot at infi-
nite substrate concentration, because, under this condi-
tion, both ofthecatalyticsites were operating at
maximum efficiency; that is, V
max
= V
max (H)
+ V
max (L)
. V
max (H)
was calculated after extrapolation of
the linear portion ofthe Lineweaver–Burk plot using
data points fromthe low substrate concentration.
V
max (L)
was obtained by subtracting V
max (H)
from
V
max
.
From the values of K
m
and V
max
(Table 1), the
dependency of V on [S] was calculated between 0 mm
and 0.35 mm UDP-Gal and compared with the experi-
mental data. For inhibitor-free epimerase, the correla-
tion was quite satisfactory (R
2
= 0.982) (Fig. 6). In
the case of native epimerase, Eqn (2) was not expected
to be valid, as thecatalyticsites were not operating
simultaneously (Fig. 5). Analysis of Fig. 5 showed that
contributions by the high-affinity and low-affinity sites
to overall turnover were 34.2% and 65.8%, respec-
tively, when maximum turnover by theenzyme was
achieved. This is in agreement with the profiles of
Fig. 2A,B, where inactivation of one catalytic site by
trypsinization or reductive inhibition led to residual
activities of 61.3% and 59.9%, respectively. Deviation
from equal catalytic efficiency ofthe two functional
Table 1. Kinetic properties of different forms of epimerase. The
high-affinity and low-affinity sites refer to the substrate UDP-Gal.
Results shown are within ± 5% error.
Epimerase
K
m
(mM UDP-Gal)
V
max
(lmolÆmin
)1
Æmg
)1
)
Native epimerase
High-affinity site 0.01 2.88
Low-affinity site 1.0 5.56
Inhibitor-free epimerase
High-affinity site 0.011 2.08
Low-affinity site 0.178 1.76
Monomeric epimerase 0.01 2.52
Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase A. Brahma et al.
6732 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
sites is in agreement with Scheme 1 and Fig. 2, where
inactivation of E
3
by trypsinization and reductive inhi-
bition was 55% ± 5% and 58% ± 2%, respectively.
Consistent deviation from inactivation by 50% in these
reactions indicated that thecatalyticsitesof epimerase
are nonidentical.
Equation (2) was used further to assess the perfor-
mance ofthecatalyticsitesofthe inhibitor-free epim-
erase. It has been assumed that the efficiency of the
catalytic sites at infinite substrate concentration
reached 100%, although these values are different in
absolute terms because of regulation. The analysis
shows that raising the substrate concentration from
0.001 mm to 0.025 mm increased the activities of the
high-affinity and low-affinity sitesfrom 0.90% to
69.4% andfrom 0.06% to 12.26%, respectively. When
the substrate concentration was further increased from
0.025 mm to 0.35 mm, the corresponding increases
were 69.4–96.96% and 12.26–66.27%, respectively.
Effects of inhibitor
The range of inhibitor concentrations andthe pattern
of dependency of inhibition of regulatory enzymes dif-
fer from those of Michaelis–Menten-type enzymes [21].
Competitive inhibition of epimerase by 5¢-UMP is
known [14–16,20,22]. Typical plots of residual activities
of native and monomeric epimerase versus inhibitor
concentration show that the profiles are widely differ-
ent (Fig. 8). In the case of native epimerase, no inhibi-
tion was observed up to 0.8 mm 5¢-UMP, as compared
with 62.5% inhibition for the monomeric epimerase.
At 20 mm 5¢-UMP, the monomeric epimerase showed
76.3% inhibition, the native epimerase showed 85%
inhibition. Dixon plots (inverse of rate versus inhibitor
concentration) ofthe monomeric and native epimerase
were hyperbolic and parabolic (results not shown). The
hyperbolic dependency indicated partial inhibition
from a single binding site ofthe inhibitor in mono-
meric epimerase. The parabolic dependency indicated
two binding sitesofthe inhibitor in native epimerase
that are regulatory in nature. These patterns are simi-
lar to those ofthe nonregulatory and regulatory types
of enzyme [21]. UDP and UTP are also competitive
inhibitors of epimerase, but have weaker affinity than
5¢-UMP [15,22]. Thus, they are expected to remove the
5¢-UMP of native epimerase. Abolition ofthe lag in
catalysis ofthe native epimerase after interaction with
these inhibitors was correlated with their inhibitor con-
stants [23]. The values ofthe residual lag, correspond-
ing inhibitor concentration and K
i
for 5¢-UMP, UDP
and UTP were 10%, 0.4 mm, and 0.15 mm, 13%,
6mm, and 0.37 mm, and 25%, 6 mm, and 0.60 mm,
respectively. Hence, the ability ofthe inhibitors to
remove the kinetic lag was inversely related to their K
i
,
and they also showed specificity of such substitution
according to their K
i
values.
Selective inactivation of one catalytic site
5¢-UMP and l(+)-arabinose arethe most effective
reagents for reductive inhibition. A combination of
uridine nucleotides such as UDP or UTP and reducing
sugars such as galactose or glucose can also induce
reductive inhibition, but with lower efficiency. Native
or inhibitor-free epimerase was incubated with 0.2 mm
UDP or UTP along with 2 mmd(+)-Gal or d(+)-Glc
at 4 °C for 40 h at pH 7.5. Whereas native epimerase
without any reagent retained 96% ± 2% of its activ-
ity, incubation with any combination of reagents
reduced the activity to 65% ± 5%, with a distinctly
different pattern in the Michaelis–Menten plot. There
was a hyperbolic dependency between 0 mm and
0.075 mm UDP-Gal, after which there was no signifi-
cant change in thecatalytic rates up to 0.35 mm sub-
strate. This evidently indicates inactivation of the
second site (Fig. 9A). Inhibitor-free epimerase incu-
bated with various combinations of reagents demon-
strated the same biphasic Michaelis–Menten
dependency as that shown in Fig. 6, with 80% ± 3%
recovery of residual activity (Fig. 9B).
Discussion
Allosteric regulation ofthe epimerase from K. fragilis
has not been investigated with confidence before. That
there is deviation fromthe Michaelis–Menten relation-
ship during the reversible conversion of UDP-Gal to
Fig. 8. Inhibitory profiles of native and monomeric epimerase by
5¢-UMP. Theenzymeand substrate concentrations were 1.65 n
M
and 0.1 mM, respectively. 5¢-UMP has no effect on the coupling
enzyme. Theenzyme activity in the absence ofthe inhibitor is
considered to be 100%.
A. Brahma et al. Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase
FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 6733
UDP-Glc before product equilibration is attained has
been known for a long time [24]. The allosteric kinetics
of the epimerase were reported more recently [25,26].
However, when the subunit-sharing model of a single
catalytic site ofthe dimeric enzyme was proposed, the
relevance of allostericity could not be explained [3].
Now it is known that the epimerase contains two
NAD
+
molecules per dimer, andthe subunit-sharing
model ofthecatalytic site is invalid [7,11,13]. Also,
binding of 1 mol of 5¢-UMP per dimer as isolated,
leading to inactivation ofthe enzyme, indicates regula-
tory behavior, provided that thecatalyticsites are
functional [14]. These findings have revived interest in
exploring the regulatory behavior of this enzyme. To
avoid misinterpretation ofthe results, the composition
and stoichiometry ofthe bound cofactor(s) and the
stability ofthe dimeric structure of epimerase with
regard to fast association–dissociation were ascer-
tained.
The epimerase from E. coli can accommodate
NADH in place of NAD
+
when overexpressed from a
plasmid [27]. As E. coli and yeast epimerase are similar
in many respects, there remains a possibility that the
yeast enzyme can recruit NADH instead of NAD
+
,
leading to partial inactivation as well as functional het-
erogeneity. To verify this, the native epimerase was
treated with 8 m urea to dissociate the cofactor(s) [17].
The resulting solution had no characteristic NADH
fluorescence to the limit of detection (< 0.01 mol per
dimer). Incomplete recruitment of NAD
+
and reacti-
vation oftheenzyme during the assay after it has
absorbed NAD
+
from the assay mixture can also
cause functional heterogeneity. This was ruled out, as
the enzyme preincubated with 0.05 mm NAD
+
for
15 min prior to the assay did not show enhancement
of activity. Reductive inhibition of epimerase followed
by quantification of dissociated NADH (as illustrated
in Experimental procedures) showed that the stoichi-
ometry was nearly 2.0 per dimer or 1 per catalytic site.
Earlier, maximum recovery of 1.70 ± 0.10 mol of
NAD per dimer was reported, based on dissociation of
the nucleotide by trichloroacetic acid or heat, where
partial coprecipitation ofthe holoenzyme with the
apoenzyme is suspected [14].
The stability of dimeric structure of epimerase with
regard to rapid association–dissociation was estab-
lished from complete and reversible dissociation of the
subunits after modification with pCMB, followed by
reduction under nondenaturing conditions [19]. The
kinetic parameters ofthe reconstituted enzyme were
distinctly different from those ofthe native enzyme
(Fig. 1A,B). The native enzyme could never attain this
property ofthe reconstituted enzyme. This indicates
that the equilibrium described in Eqn (1) is not valid
for epimerase.
As kinetic data cannot predict the number of cata-
lytic sitesof an enzyme, selective inactivation of one
site of epimerase appeared to be the only answer to
this question. Such a proposition remained elusive, as
the catalyticsites were found to be identical with
regard to several modification reagents. Reductive inhi-
bition offered a unique opportunity to address this
issue. It was proposed that reductive inhibition could
reduce one NAD
+
of the enzyme–inhibitor complex
E
3
, leading to E
3A
. As a consequence, E
3
would be
inactivated by 50%. In reality, such experiments
A
B
Fig. 9. Michaelis–Menten plots of epimerase preincubated with
substrate analogs. (A) Native epimerase.
•
—
•
, epimerase incu-
bated without any substrate analog.
, enzyme preincubated
with 0.2 m
M UDP + 2 mMD(+)-Gal. , enzyme preincubated
with 0.2 m
M UDP + 2 mMD(+)-Glc. (B) Inhibitor-free epimerase.
•
—
•
, dependencies of inhibitor-free epimerase preincubated
without substrate analogs.
, dependencies of inhibitor-free
epimerase preincubated with 0.2 m
M UDP + 2 mMD(+)-Gal.
Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase A. Brahma et al.
6734 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 6725–6740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi. Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS
[...]... residual activity of 58% ± 2% (n = 6) This indicates that thecatalyticsitesoftheenzymearefunctionalandare distinguishable on the basis of binding with the inhibitor Careful analysis of Fig 2 shows that inactivation of E3 by trypsin and reductive inhibition consistently deviated from 50%, in spite of modification of one catalytic site of two Such inequality between two identical catalyticsites is usually... concentrations of UDP-Gal (Fig 5) Analysis ofthe Michaelis–Menten dependency of inhibitor-free epimerase also indicated that its catalyticsitesare operating independently with unequal efficiencies The nonidentical nature ofthe Michaelis–Menten relationships of inhibitor-free and native epimerase is an indication ofthe regulatory role ofthe bound 5¢-UMP in the latter The Michaelis–Menten relationship of the. .. indicating that the coupling enzyme was free from epimerase activity By varying the volume ofenzyme added between 10 lL and 400 lL instead of water in the assay mixture and observing the linear progress curve of D0.00 5–0 .03 absorption unitsÆmin)1, the assay permits detection of as little as 0.25% ofenzyme activity To study the effects of inhibitor, the assay mixture was incubated with 0–2 0 mm 5¢-UMP... such as the close proximity of epimerase catalyticsitesand flexibility ofthe UDP-Gal-binding regions are in agreement with the allosteric relationship between them Biological significance It is pertinent to ask why the native epimerase is the only isolable form oftheenzymefrom yeast cells harvested near termination of growth The content of inhibitor-free epimerase is gradually reduced with the concomitant... 6737 Regulation ofcatalyticsitesof yeast epimerase A Brahma et al Scheme 3 Distinction between coenzyme fluorescence and NADH fluorescence of epimerase The underlining indicates theenzyme surface Binding of NAD+ ⁄ NADH to theenzyme is noncovalent The hatched sign indicates weak spatial interaction between NAD+ and a cysteine ofthe enzyme, leading to NADH-like coenzyme fluorescence The subscript ‘free’... presence of interfering enzymes, could alter theenzyme kinetics [28] The monophasic Michaelis–Menten relationship ofthe monomeric epimerase demonstrated the absence of such artefacts andthe requirement for a dimeric structure to explain the regulation The difference in Vmax values among different forms ofthe epimerase is a reflection of change of conformation (Table 1) [29,30] Thefunctional distinction... 4–9 ) arethe average of three sets, where the variation of results was within ± 10% Under the stated assay conditions, only the native epimerase (E1) showed an initial lag in catalysis The duration of lag (in seconds) was calculated fromthe time axis by extrapolating the linear portion ofthe progress curve ofthe coupled assay The initial rate could be defined when progress to 30 s was obtained from. .. 672 5–6 740 ª 2009 Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS A Brahma et al remove reagents and small peptides The recovery of monomeric epimerase fromthe spin column was 95% in terms of activity and 60% in terms of mass calculated on the basis ofthe dimeric enzyme [11] Models of inhibitor-free and monomeric epimerase are shown in Scheme 2 Preparation of. .. at the active site of UDP-glucose 4-epimerasefromKluyveromycesfragilis J Biol Chem 270, 1138 3– 11390 21 Roberts DV (1977) Regulatory Enzymes and their Kinetic Behavior In Enzyme Kinetics pp 16 8–2 27 Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 22 Mukherjee S & Bhaduri A (1992) An essential histidine residue for the activity of UDP-glucose 4-epimerasefromKluyveromycesfragilis J Biol Chem 267, 1170 9– 11713... Completion ofthe reaction was indicated by complete inactivation oftheenzymeThe reduced cofactor was dissociated fromtheenzyme after incubation with 8 m urea at pH 7.5 for 10 min The concentration ofthe reduced cofactor was determined fromthe fluorescence intensity with respect to a 6738 Trypsin digestion Digestion of epimerase by trypsin was performed essentially as described for preparation of monomeric . UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from Kluyveromyces
fragilis – catalytic sites of the homodimeric enzyme
are functional and regulated
Amrita. This
indicates that the catalytic sites of the enzyme are
functional and are distinguishable on the basis of bind-
ing with the inhibitor. Careful analysis of Fig.