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Vol. 55, Issue 6, 982-992, June 1999
Laboratoire de Neurobiologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire,
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité de
Recherche Mixte 8544, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris,
France (N.M, S.B., J.M., I.S.); Departments of Structural Biology
(H.M.G., J.L.S.) and Neurobiology (I.S.), Weizmann Institute of
Science, Rehovoth, Israel; and Unité de Conformation de
Macromolécules Biologiques, Université Libre de Bruxelles,
Bruxelles, Belgium (D.V.B., S.J.W.)
Torpedo acetylcholinesterase is irreversibly inactivated
by modifying a buried free cysteine, Cys231, with sulfhydryl reagents. The stability of the enzyme, as monitored by measuring the rate of
inactivation, was reduced by mutating a leucine, Leu282, to a smaller
amino acid residue. Leu282 is located within the "peripheral" anionic site, at the entrance to the active-site gorge. Thus, loss of
activity was due to the increased reactivity of Cys231. This was
paralleled by an increased susceptibility to thermal denaturation,
which was shown to be due to a large decrease in the activation
enthalpy. Similar results were obtained when either of two other
residues in contact with Leu282 in Torpedo
acetylcholinesterase, Trp279 and Ser291, was replaced by an amino acid
with a smaller side chain. We studied the effects of various
ligands specific for either the active or peripheral sites on both
thermal inactivation and on inactivation by 4,4'-dithiodipyridine. The
wild-type and mutated enzymes could be either protected or sensitized.
In some cases, opposite effects of the same ligand were observed for
chemical modification and thermal denaturation. The mutated residues
are within a conserved loop, W279-S291, at the top of the active-site gorge, that contributes to the peripheral anionic site. Theoretical analysis showed that Torpedo acetylcholinesterase
consists of two structural domains, each comprising one contiguous
polypeptide segment. The W279-S291 loop, located in the first domain,
makes multiple contacts with the second domain across the active-site gorge. We postulate that the mutations to residues with smaller side
chains destabilize the conserved loop, thus disrupting cross-gorge interactions and, ultimately, the entire structure.
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