Abstrakt: |
Resonance Raman spectra were obtained for the acylenzyme 4-dimethylamino-3-nitro(alpha-benzamido)cinnamoyl-papain prepared using the chromophoric substrate methyl 4-dimethylamino-3-nitro(alpha-benzamido)cinnamate. These spectra contained vibrational spectral data of the acyl residue while covalently attached to the active site and could be used to follow directly acylation and deacylation kinetics. Spectra were obtained at pH values ranging from those where the acyl-enzyme is relatively stable (pH 3.0, tau 1/2 congruent to 800 s) to those where it is relatively unstable (pH 9.2, tau 1/2 congruent to 223 s). Throughout this range acyl-enzyme spectra differed completely from that of the free substrate or the product (4-dimethylamino-3-nitro(alpha-benzamido)cinnamic acid) indicating that a structural change occurred on combination with the active site. The spectra are consistent with rearrangement of the alpha-benzamido group in the bound substrate, -NH--C(==O)Ph becoming --N==C(--OX)Ph, where the bonding to oxygen is unknown. Superimposed on these large differences, small changes in acyl-enzyme spectra also occurred as pH was raised to decrease the half-life. All of the above spectral perturbations are consistent with a structural change in the acyl-enzyme which precedes the rate-determining step in deacylation. Thus, deacylation proceeds from an acyl residue structure differing from that of the substrate in solution. Upon acid denaturation the spectrum characteristic of the intermediate reverts to one closely resembling the substrate, demonstrating that a functioning active site is necessary to produce the observed differences. Spectra in D2O of native acyl-enzyme were identical with those in H2O, indicating that the observed differences in rate constant were not due to solvent-induced structural changes. Activated papain purified by crystallization or by affinity chromatography formed the acyl-enzyme. However, the kinetics of formation and deacylation differed between these materials, as did the spectral properties. Small differences in active-site structure are considered to be responsible for this effect, and it is suggested that such spectral perturbations may be useful in directly relating small differences in structure of the substrate in the active site with corresponding differences in kinetics. |