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Isotope effects on the enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions of chorismate
Authors:Wright S Kirk  DeClue Michael S  Mandal Ajay  Lee Lac  Wiest Olaf  Cleland W Wallace  Hilvert Donald
Institution:Institute for Enzyme Research and Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin, 1710 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53726, USA.
Abstract:The important biosynthetic intermediate chorismate reacts thermally by two competitive pathways, one leading to 4-hydroxybenzoate via elimination of the enolpyruvyl side chain, and the other to prephenate by a facile Claisen rearrangement. Measurements with isotopically labeled chorismate derivatives indicate that both are concerted sigmatropic processes, controlled by the orientation of the enolpyruvyl group. In the elimination reaction of 4-2H]chorismate, roughly 60% of the label was found in pyruvate after 3 h at 60 degrees C. Moreover, a 1.846 +/- 0.057 2H isotope effect for the transferred hydrogen atom and a 1.0374 +/- 0.0005 18O isotope effect for the ether oxygen show that the transition state for this process is highly asymmetric, with hydrogen atom transfer from C4 to C9 significantly less advanced than C-O bond cleavage. In the competing Claisen rearrangement, a very large 18O isotope effect at the bond-breaking position (1.0482 +/- 0.0005) and a smaller 13C isotope effect at the bond-making position (1.0118 +/- 0.0004) were determined. Isotope effects of similar magnitude characterized the transformations catalyzed by evolutionarily unrelated chorismate mutases from Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. The enzymatic reactions, like their solution counterpart, are thus concerted 3,3]-sigmatropic processes in which C-C bond formation lags behind C-O bond cleavage. However, as substantially larger 18O and smaller 13C isotope effects were observed for a mutant enzyme in which chemistry is fully rate determining, the ionic active site may favor a somewhat more polarized transition state than that seen in solution.
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