TY - JOUR
T1 - Electrostatic attraction by surface charge does not contribute to the catalytic efficiency of acetylcholinesterase
AU - Shafferman, Avigdor
AU - Ordentlich, Arie
AU - Barak, Dov
AU - Kronman, Chanoch
AU - Ber, Raphael
AU - Bino, Tamar
AU - Ariel, Naomi
AU - Osman, Roman
AU - Velan, Baruch
PY - 1994
Y1 - 1994
N2 - Acetylcholinesterases (AChEs) are characterized by a high net negative charge and by an uneven surface charge distribution, giving rise to a negative electrostatic potential extending over most of the molecular surface. To evaluate the contribution of these electro- static properties to the catalytic efficiency, 20 single-and multiple-site mutants of human AChE were generated by replacing up to seven acidic residues, vicinal to the rim of the active-center gorge (Glu84, Glu285, Glu292, Asp349, Glu358, Glu389 and Asp390), by neutral amino acids. Progressive simulated replacement of these charged residues results in a gradual decrease of the negative electrostatic potential which is essentially eliminated by neutralizing six or seven charges. In marked contrast to the shrinking of the electrostatic potential, the corresponding mutations had no significant effect on the apparent bimolecular rate constants of hydrolysis for charged and noncharged substrates, or on the K(j) value for a charged active center inhibitor. Moreover, the k(cat) values for all 20 mutants are essentially identical to that of the wild type enzyme, and the apparent bimolecular rate constants show a moderate dependence on the ionic strength, which is invariant for all the enzymes examined. These findings suggest that the surface electrostatic properties of AChE do not contribute to the catalytic rate, that this rate is probably not diffusion-controlled and that long-range electrostatic interactions play no role in stabilization of the transition states of the catalytic process.
AB - Acetylcholinesterases (AChEs) are characterized by a high net negative charge and by an uneven surface charge distribution, giving rise to a negative electrostatic potential extending over most of the molecular surface. To evaluate the contribution of these electro- static properties to the catalytic efficiency, 20 single-and multiple-site mutants of human AChE were generated by replacing up to seven acidic residues, vicinal to the rim of the active-center gorge (Glu84, Glu285, Glu292, Asp349, Glu358, Glu389 and Asp390), by neutral amino acids. Progressive simulated replacement of these charged residues results in a gradual decrease of the negative electrostatic potential which is essentially eliminated by neutralizing six or seven charges. In marked contrast to the shrinking of the electrostatic potential, the corresponding mutations had no significant effect on the apparent bimolecular rate constants of hydrolysis for charged and noncharged substrates, or on the K(j) value for a charged active center inhibitor. Moreover, the k(cat) values for all 20 mutants are essentially identical to that of the wild type enzyme, and the apparent bimolecular rate constants show a moderate dependence on the ionic strength, which is invariant for all the enzymes examined. These findings suggest that the surface electrostatic properties of AChE do not contribute to the catalytic rate, that this rate is probably not diffusion-controlled and that long-range electrostatic interactions play no role in stabilization of the transition states of the catalytic process.
KW - Acetylcholinesterase
KW - Diffusion-controlled rates of catalysis
KW - Electrostatic potentials
KW - Site-directed mutagenesis
KW - Surface charges
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0027934296
U2 - 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06650.x
DO - 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06650.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 8062821
AN - SCOPUS:0027934296
SN - 0261-4189
VL - 13
SP - 3448
EP - 3455
JO - EMBO Journal
JF - EMBO Journal
IS - 15
ER -