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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Jul 21;95(15):8449-54.Transition state structure of arginine kinase: implications for catalysis of bimolecular reactions.Zhou G, Somasundaram T, Blanc E, Parthasarathy G, Ellington WR, Chapman MS.Institute of Molecular Biophysics, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306-4380, USA. Arginine kinase belongs to the family of enzymes, including creatine kinase,
that catalyze the buffering of ATP in cells with fluctuating energy requirements
and that has been a paradigm for classical enzymological studies. The 1.86-A
resolution structure of its transition-state analog complex, reported here,
reveals its active site and offers direct evidence for the importance of precise
substrate alignment in the catalysis of bimolecular reactions, in contrast to
the unimolecular reactions studied previously. In the transition-state analog
complex studied here, a nitrate mimics the planar gamma-phosphoryl during
associative in-line transfer between ATP and arginine. The active site is
unperturbed, and the reactants are not constrained covalently as in a
bisubstrate complex, so it is possible to measure how precisely they are
pre-aligned by the enzyme. Alignment is exquisite. Entropic effects may
contribute to catalysis, but the lone-pair orbitals are also aligned close
enough to their optimal trajectories for orbital steering to be a factor during
nucleophilic attack. The structure suggests that polarization, strain toward the
transition state, and acid-base catalysis also contribute, but, in contrast to
unimolecular enzyme reactions, their role appears to be secondary to substrate
alignment in this bimolecular reaction.
PMID: 9671698 [PubMed] |
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