Web Release Date: April 21,
Comparative Kinetics of Cofactor Association and Dissociation for the Human and
Trypanosomal S-Adenosylhomocysteine Hydrolases. 1. Basic Features of the
Association and Dissociation Processes






and



Departments of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, Chemistry, and Molecular Biosciences and Bioinformatics Core Facility, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66047
Received January 26, 2007

Abstract:
The S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) hydrolases catalyze the reversible conversion of
AdoHcy to adenosine and homocysteine, making use of a catalytic cycle in which a tightly bound NAD+
oxidizes the 3'-hydroxyl group of the substrate at the beginning of the cycle, activating the 4'-CH bond
for elimination of homocysteine, followed by Michael addition of water to the resulting intermediate and
a final reduction by the tightly bound NADH to give adenosine. The equilibrium and kinetic properties
of the association and dissociation of the cofactor NAD+ from the enzymes of Homo sapiens (Hs-SAHH)
and Trypanosoma cruzi (Tc-SAHH) are qualitatively similar but quantitatively distinct. Both enzymes
bind NAD+ in a complex scheme. The four active sites of the homotetrameric apoenzyme appear to
divide into two numerically equal classes of active sites. One class of sites binds cofactor weakly and
generates full activity very rapidly (in less than 1 min). The other class binds cofactor more strongly but
generates activity only slowly (>30 min). In the case of Tc-SAHH, the final affinity for NAD+ is roughly
micromolar and this affinity persists as the equilibrium affinity. In the case of Hs-SAHH, the slow-binding phase terminates in micromolar affinity also, but over a period of hours, the dissociation rate
constant decreases until the final equilibrium affinity is in the nanomolar range. The slow binding of
NAD+ by both enzymes exhibits saturation kinetics with respect to the cofactor concentration; however,
binding to Hs-SAHH has a maximum rate constant around 0.06 s-1, while the rate constant for binding
to Tc-SAHH levels out at 0.006 s-1. In contrast to the complex kinetics of association, both enzymes
undergo dissociation of NAD+ from all four sites in a single first-order reaction. The equilibrium affinities
of both Hs-SAHH and Tc-SAHH for NADH are in the nanomolar range. The dissociation rate constants
and the slow-binding association rate constants for NAD+ show a complex temperature dependence with
both enzymes; however, the cofactor always dissociates more rapidly from Tc-SAHH than from Hs-SAHH, the ratio being around 80-fold at 37
C, and the cofactor binds more rapidly to Hs-SAHH than
to Tc-SAHH above ~16
C. These features present an opening for selective inhibition of Tc-SAHH over
Hs-SAHH, demonstrated with the thioamide analogues of NAD+ and NADH. Both analogues bind to
Hs-SAHH with ~40 nM affinities but much more weakly to Tc-SAHH (0.6-15
M). Nevertheless, both
analogues inactivated Tc-SAHH 60% (NAD+ analogue) or 100% (NADH analogue) within 30 min, while
the degree of inhibition of Hs-SAHH approached 30% only after 12 h. The rate of loss of activity is equal
to the rate of dissociation of the cofactor and thus 80-fold faster at 37
C for Tc-SAHH.
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