Properties and Kinetic Analysis of UDP-glucose Dehydrogenase from Group A Streptococci

  • Campbell R
  • Sala R
  • van de Rijn I
  • et al.
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Abstract

UDP-glucuronic acid is used by many pathogenic bacteria in the construction of an antiphagocytic capsule that is required for virulence. The enzyme UDP-glucose dehydrogenase catalyzes the NAD+-dependent 2-fold oxidation of UDP-glucose and provides a source of the acid. In the present study the recombinant dehydrogenase from group A streptococci has been purified and found to be active as a monomer. The enzyme contains no chromophoric cofactors, and its activity is unaffected by the presence of EDTA or carbonyl-trapping reagents. Initial velocity and product inhibition kinetic patterns are consistent with a bi-uni-uni-bi ping-pong mechanism in which UDP-glucose is bound first and UDP-glucuronate is released last. UDP-xylose was found to be a competitive inhibitor (Ki, 2.7 microM) of the enzyme. The enzyme is irreversibly inactivated by uridine 5'-diphosphate-chloroacetol due to the alkylation of an active site cysteine thiol. The apparent second order rate constant for the inhibition (ki/Ki) was found to be 2 x 10(3) mM-1 min-1. Incubation with the truncated compound, chloroacetol phosphate, resulted in no detectable inactivation when tested under comparable conditions. This supports the notion that uridine 5'-diphosphate-chloroacetol is bound in the place of UDP-glucose and is not simply acting as a nonspecific alkylating agent.

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Campbell, R. E., Sala, R. F., van de Rijn, I., & Tanner, M. E. (1997). Properties and Kinetic Analysis of UDP-glucose Dehydrogenase from Group A Streptococci. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(6), 3416–3422. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.6.3416

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