Thermodynamic analysis of halide binding to haloalkane dehalogenase suggests the occurrence of large conformational changes

Geja H. Krooshof, René Floris, Armand W.J.W. Tepper, Dick B. Janssen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)
327 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Haloalkane dehalogenase (DhlA) hydrolyzes short-chain haloalkanes to produce the corresponding alcohols and halide ions. Release of the halide ion from the active-site cavity can proceed via a two-step and a three-step route, which both contain slow enzyme isomerization steps. Thermodynamic analysis of bromide binding and release showed that the slow unimolecular isomerization steps in the three-step bromide export route have considerably larger transition state enthalpies and entropies than those in the other route. This suggests that the three-step route involves different and perhaps larger conformational changes than the two-step export route. We propose that the three-step halide export route starts with conformational changes that result in a more open configuration of the active site from which the halide ion can readily escape. In addition, we suggest that the two-step route for halide release involves the transfer of the halide ion from the halide-binding site in the cavity to a binding site somewhere at the protein surface, where a so-called collision complex is formed in which the halide ion is only weakly bound. No large structural rearrangements an necessary for this latter process.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)355-360
Number of pages6
JournalProtein Science
Volume8
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb-1999

Keywords

  • conformational changes
  • DhlA
  • halide binding
  • haloalkane dehalogenase
  • pre-steady-state kinetics
  • thermodynamic analysis
  • SITE-DIRECTED MUTAGENESIS
  • INTERMEDIATE
  • MECHANISM
  • KINETICS
  • STATES

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