Protein Information

ID 1879
Name pyruvate carboxylase
Synonyms PC; PCB; Pyruvate carboxylase; Pyruvic carboxylase; Pyruvate carboxylases; Pyruvic carboxylases; Carboxylase, pyruvate

Compound Information

ID 1315
Name oxamate
CAS hexyl 2-(diethylamino)-2-oxoacetate

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
19341298 Zeczycki TN, St Maurice M, Jitrapakdee S, Wallace JC, Attwood PV, Cleland WW: Insight into the carboxyl transferase domain mechanism of pyruvate carboxylase from Rhizobium etli. Biochemistry. 2009 May 26;48(20):4305-13.
The effects of mutations in the active site of the carboxyl transferase domain of Rhizobium etli pyruvate carboxylase have been determined for the forward reaction to form oxaloacetate, the reverse reaction to form MgATP, the oxamate-induced decarboxylation of oxaloacetate, the phosphorylation of MgADP by carbamoyl phosphate, and the bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reaction. Additional studies with these mutants examined the effect of pyruvate and oxamate on the reactions of the biotin carboxylase domain. From these mutagenic studies, putative roles for catalytically relevant active site residues were assigned and a more accurate description of the mechanism of the carboxyl transferase domain is presented. The T882A mutant showed no catalytic activity for reactions involving the carboxyl transferase domain but surprisingly showed 7- and 3.5-fold increases in activity, as compared to that of the wild-type enzyme, for the ADP phosphorylation and bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reactions, respectively. Furthermore, the partial inhibition of the T882A-catalyzed BC domain reactions by oxamate and pyruvate further supports the critical role of Thr882 in the proton transfer between biotin and pyruvate in the carboxyl transferase domain. The catalytic mechanism appears to involve the decarboxylation of carboxybiotin and removal of a proton from Thr882 by the resulting biotin enolate with either a concerted or subsequent transfer of a proton from pyruvate to Thr882. The resulting enolpyruvate then reacts with CO (2) to form oxaloacetate and complete the reaction.
32(0,1,1,2)