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Richard C. Holz

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Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The Aminopeptidase From Aeromonas Proteolytica Can Function As An Esterase, David Bienvenue, Rebecca Matthew, Dagmar Ringe, Richard Holz Mar 2015

The Aminopeptidase From Aeromonas Proteolytica Can Function As An Esterase, David Bienvenue, Rebecca Matthew, Dagmar Ringe, Richard Holz

Richard C. Holz

The aminopeptidase from Aeromonas proteolytica (AAP) can catalyze the hydrolysis of L-leucine ethyl ester (L-Leu-OEt) with a rate of 96±5 s–1 and a K m of 700 µM. The observed turnover number for L-Leu-OEt hydrolysis by AAP is similar to that observed for peptide hydrolysis, which is 67±5 s–1. The k cat values for the hydrolysis of L-Leu-OEt and L-leucine-p-nitroanilide (L-pNA) catalyzed by AAP were determined at different pH values under saturating substrate concentrations. Construction of an Arrhenius plot from the temperature dependence of AAP-catalyzed ester hydrolysis indicates that the rate-limiting step does not change as a function of temperature …


Inhibition Of The Aminopeptidase From Aeromonas Proteolytica By L-Leucinethiol: Kinetic And Spectroscopic Characterization Of A Slow, Tight-Binding Inhibitor–Enzyme Complex, David Bienvenue, Brian Bennett, Richard Holz Mar 2015

Inhibition Of The Aminopeptidase From Aeromonas Proteolytica By L-Leucinethiol: Kinetic And Spectroscopic Characterization Of A Slow, Tight-Binding Inhibitor–Enzyme Complex, David Bienvenue, Brian Bennett, Richard Holz

Richard C. Holz

The peptide inhibitor l-leucinethiol (LeuSH) was found to be a potent, slow-binding inhibitor of the aminopeptidase from Aeromonas proteolytica (AAP). The overall potency (KI*) of LeuSH was 7 nM while the corresponding alcohol l-leucinol (LeuOH) was a simple competitive inhibitor of much lower potency (KI=17 μM). These data suggest that the free thiol is likely involved in the formation of the E·I and E·I* complexes, presumably providing a metal ligand. In order to probe the nature of the interaction of LeuSH and LeuOH with the dinuclear active site of AAP, we have recorded both the electronic absorption and EPR spectra …


Kinetic And Spectroscopic Characterization Of The E134a- And E134d-Altered Dape-Encoded N-Succinyl-L,L-Diaminopimelic Acid Desuccinylase From Haemophilus Influenzae, Ryan Davis, David Bienvenue, Sabina Swierczek, Danuta Gilner, Lakshman Rajagopal, Brian Bennett, Richard Holz Mar 2015

Kinetic And Spectroscopic Characterization Of The E134a- And E134d-Altered Dape-Encoded N-Succinyl-L,L-Diaminopimelic Acid Desuccinylase From Haemophilus Influenzae, Ryan Davis, David Bienvenue, Sabina Swierczek, Danuta Gilner, Lakshman Rajagopal, Brian Bennett, Richard Holz

Richard C. Holz

Glutamate-134 (E134) is proposed to act as the general acid/base during the hydrolysis reaction catalyzed by the dapE-encoded N-succinyl-l,l-diaminopimelic acid desuccinylase (DapE) from Haemophilus influenzae. To date, no direct evidence has been reported for the role of E134 during catalytic turnover by DapE. In order to elucidate the catalytic role of E134, altered DapE enzymes were prepared in which E134 was substituted with an alanine and an aspartate residue. The Michaelis constant (K m) does not change upon substitution with aspartate but the rate of the reaction changes drastically in the following order: glutamate (100% activity), aspartate (0.09%), and alanine …