Title: Spectrophotometric determination of a single pKa value
1- Spectrophotometric determination of a single pKa
value - Determination of a single pKa value of an
acid/base pair with an oxidizable base - Kinetic determination of a single pKa value
- Kinetic determination of two pKa values
2- Spectrophotometric determination of a single pKa
value - Biochemistry, 2003, 42, 14541-52, Yee et al.
- E. coli ribonucleotide reductase catalyzes the
reduction of NDPs to dNDPs. The catalytic cycle
is initiated by a radical, that is produced by a
radical diferric-tyrosyl cofactor (in subunit R2)
35 Å away from the active site (in subunit R1).
The radical is transported by PCET (proton
coupled electron transport). Which amino acids
are involved? - One candidate is Tyr356 because Phe356 protein is
inactive. It was tested by replacement to
difluorotyrosine and nitrotyrosine via chemical
synthesis and intein technology.
3- Spectrophotometric determination of a single pKa
value - Difluorotyrosine (F2Y) has a pKa in the
physiological range (7.8) but a redoxpotential
similar to Tyr. The activity of an F2Y protein
should be affected by pH because only the
protonated form works for PCET. But does F2Y have
the same pKa in solution as in the protein? To
test this, Tyr is replaced by nitrotyrosine
(NO2Y) because its properties can be measured by
absorption.
4- Spectrophotometric determination of a single pKa
value
PCET proton-coupled electron transfer RNR
ribonucleotide reductase
5- Spectrophotometric determination of a single pKa
value
6 7- Goal pKa value
- Measurements pH dependence of the absorption
- Prediction pH dependence of the absorption
- Assumption absorption of the protonated and
deprotonated state are additive, single
protonation/deprotonation step,
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation - Unknown parameters pKa, absorption of the
protonated and deprotonated state
8- Equations
- Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
- Conservation of mass
- Beer-Lambert law
9- A(0) absorption of NO2Y(0)
- A(1-) absorption of NO2Y(1-)
- A(pH) total absorption of NO2Y at a specific pH
- eNO2Y(0) absorption coefficient of NO2Y(0)
- eNO2Y(1-) absorption coefficient of NO2Y(1-)
10- Eliminate A(0) and A(1-)
- Eliminate NO2Y(0)
- Eliminate NO2Y(1-)
11- Introduce A0 and A1-
- A0 absorption, if all NO2Y is protonated
- A1- absorption, if all NO2Y is deprotonated
- and eliminate NO2Yges, eNO2Y(0) and eNO2Y(1-)
12 pKa 7.0, 8.0
pKa 7.05, 7.96
13- Result The pKa of NO2Y (7.0) is considerably
lower than that of Tyr (10.5). Comparison of the
pKas of peptide, subunit R2, and complexes with
R1 and substrates shows little perturbation of
the pKa (differences lt 1) by the protein
environment. This behavior can be transferred to
Tyr and other Tyr derivatives, for example
2,3-difluorotyrosine. Here, the redox potential
is similar to Tyr (in contrast to NO2Y, whos
redox potential is higher than for Tyr), but the
pKa cannot be directly measured. Enzyme activity
is very low for the NO2Y-derivative.
14 Same pH profile
F2Y has a lower pKa, but it shows the same pH
dependence as wild type (with Tyr). Thus, radical
initiation (transport from R2 to R1) seems not
to use Tyr356 in a proton-coupled electron
transport.
15- The redox potential can also be used to determine
the pKa because the protonated phenol is much
harder to oxidize (a proton and/or the nitro
group make it harder to remove an electron).
Nitrotyrosine
Tyrosine
16The cationic radical is unstable. Therefore,
pKa,ox is low and E0,acidic is high.
In the following, only pKa,red and E0, bas are
considered.
17- Goal pKa value
- Measurements pH dependence of the redox
potential - Prediction pH dependence of the deprotonated
reduced and oxidized state - Assumption single protonation/deprotonation step
with oxidation of the deprotonated form (the
protonated oxidized form (cation radical) is
considered unstable), Henderson-Hasselbalch
equation, Nernst equation - Unknown parameters pKa,red, E0,bas at high pH
18- Equations
- Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
- Conservation of mass (reduced forms)
-
- Nernst equation
(1)
(2)
(3)
19- NO2Y(0) protonated nitrotyrosine
- NO2Y(1-) deprotonated nitrotyrosine
- NO2Y(0) deprotonated oxidized nitrotyrosine
radical - NO2Yred concentration of all reduced species
(protonated and deprotonated form) - E redox potential of the nitrotyrosyl
radical/nitrotyrosinate pair - E0 standard redox potential of E
20- At low pH NO2Y(1-) is decreased compared to
high pH (NO2Yred) (eliminate NO2Y(0), 2 in 1) - (4)
- NO2Y(0) is assumed pH independent, but red
(i.e. NO2Y(1-)) is pH dependent (see 4). E can
then be described with a pH dependent E0.
Reference is E0(high pH), where all reduced
nitrotyrosine is deprotonated.
21 Tyr / NO2Y pKa - / 7.0 E0
- / 1.02 V
Tyr / NO2Y pKa 9.85 / 6.98 E0
0.64 V / 1.00 V
22- Kinetic determination of a single pKa value
- Biochemistry, 2003, 42, 15179-88, Ghanem et
al.
Ein ander mal
23- Kinetic determination of two pKa values
- Biochemistry, 2003, 42, 14614-25, Stefanova
et al. - In the example the fast acylation of the
penicillin binding protein 3 (PBP 3) from
Neisseria gonorrhoeae is tested for its pH
dependence. PBPs are characterized and detected
by their binding of the antibiotic penicillin.
The physiological role of the PBPs is within the
synthesis of the cell wall peptidoglycan that
surrounds the bacteria. - Transpeptidase activity of the PBPs
24NH2
COOH
252. The amino group is attached to the D-Ala.
NH2
1. The C-terminal D-Ala is cleaved off and the
PBP is attached to the second last D-Ala.
COOH
COOH
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27- For substrate binding (at the D-Ala-D-Ala part of
the peptidoglycan) and the mechanism of
transpeptidation (acylation and deacylation) the
protonation state of the enzyme is important. - Penicillin inhibits the transpeptidation, because
it acylates the protein fast, but only very
slowly deacylates (--gt penicillin binding
protein). - The reaction with penicillin is useful for the
study of the acylation reaction.
28- The reaction with penicillin can be described by
binding, acylation and deacylation - k2/K describes formation of the acyl enzyme at
low concentrations of b-lactam antibiotic
(penicillin). - K (k-1 k2)/k1.
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30- Goal pKa values
- Measurements pH dependence of the k2/K
- Prediction pH dependence of the reaction (k2/K)
- Assumption two protonation/deprotonation steps,
two Henderson-Hasselbalch equations, only the
singly protonated species is active - Unknown parameters pKa,1, pKa,2, k2/K for the
singly protonated species
31- The two deprotonation steps
-
- The equilibria and Henderson-Hasselbalch
equations - (1)
- (2)
32- The enzyme must be in one of the three
protonation states - (3)
- Each species could contribute to the acylation
rate - (4)
33- Eliminate EH2 (3 and 1a) and calculate EH
- (5)
- Eliminate EH (5 in 2a)
- (6)
34- Use (6) to calculate EH with (2a)
- (7)
- Use (7) to calculate EH2 with (1a)
- (8)
35- Now we asume, that the low pH and the high pH
species are inactive ( Acyllow Acylhigh 0) - (9)
- This is the same form as used in the paper
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39- The separately calculated values are not very
different from the overall calculation, but at
least the number of parameters in the second case
is lower. This is preferred.