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Dive into the research topics where Adam D.B. Waldman is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam D.B. Waldman.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1988

The use of a genetically engineered tryptophan to identify the movement of a domain of B. stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenase with the process which limits the steady-state turnover of the enzyme

Adam D.B. Waldman; Keith W. Hart; Anthony R. Clarke; Dale B. Wigley; David A. Barstow; Tony Atkinson; William N. Chia; J. John Holbrook

A general technique for monitoring the intramolecular motion of a protein is described. Genetic engineering is used to replace all the natural tryptophan residues with tyrosine. A single tryptophan residue is then inserted at a specific site within the protein where motion is then detected from the fluorescence characteristics of this fluorophore. This technique has been used in B. stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenase mutant (W80Y, W150Y, W203Y, G106W) to correlate the slow closure of a surface loop of polypeptide (residues 98-110) with the maximum catalytic velocity of the enzyme.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987

A strong carboxylate-arginine interaction is important in substrate orientation and recognition in lactate dehydrogenase

Keith W. Hart; Anthony R. Clarke; Dale B. Wigley; Adam D.B. Waldman; William N. Chia; David A. Barstow; Tony Atkinson; J. Bryan Jones; J. John Holbrook

Using site-directed mutagenesis, Arginine-171 at the substrate-binding site of Bacillus stearothermophilus, lactate dehydrogenase has been replaced by lysine. In the closely homologous eukaryotic lactate dehydrogenase, this residue binds the carboxylate group of the substrate by forming a planar bifurcated bond. The mutation diminishes the binding energy of pyruvate, alpha-ketobutyrate and alpha-ketovalerate (measured by kcat/Km) by the same amount (about 6 kcal/mol). For each additional methylene group on the substrate, there is a loss of about 1.5 kcal/mol of binding energy in both mutant and wild-type enzymes. From these parallel trends in the two forms of enzyme, we infer that the mode of productive substrate binding is identical in each, the only difference being the loss of a strong carboxylate-guanidinium interaction in the mutant. In contrast to this simple pattern in kcat/Km, the Km alone increases with substrate-size in the wild-type enzyme, but decreases in the mutant. These results can be most simply explained by the occurrence of relatively tight unproductive enzyme-substrate complexes in the mutant enzyme as the substrate alkyl chain is extended. This does not occur in the wild-type enzyme, because the strong orienting effect of Arg-171 maximizes the frequency of substrates binding in the correct alignment.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

Changes in the state of subunit association of lactate dehydrogenase from Bacillus stearothermophilus.

Anthony R. Clarke; Adam D.B. Waldman; Ian Munro; J. John Holbrook

Time-resolved measurements of the fluorescence anisotropy of an extrinsic dye-group attached to lactate dehydrogenase from B. stearothermophilus revealed that the rotational correlation time of the enzyme at low concentrations is 55 ns, while at high enzyme concentrations or in the presence of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (Fru-1,6-P2) the correlation time increases to 95 ns. These correlation times are consistent with a change in Mr from 85 000 +/- 12 000 (dimer) to 150 000 +/- 22 000 (tetramer) and show that the tetrameric state can be induced either by raising the protein concentration or by the addition of the ligand. We have confirmed this change in molecular weight by gel-filtration experiments. In the ligand-induced tetramer, two Fru-1,6-P2 molecules are bound.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

The rates of defined changes in protein structure during the catalytic cycle of lactate dehydrogenase

Anthony R. Clarke; Adam D.B. Waldman; Keith W. Hart; J. John Holbrook

Rapid mixing, kinetic experiments were performed on native and modified [Tyr(3NO2)237)] porcine H4 lactate dehydrogenase at low temperatures in a medium containing 30% dimethyl sulphoxide. In the temperature range -16 to +8 degrees C, the modified enzyme-NADH complex, when mixed with 1 mM pyruvate, is converted to enzyme, NAD+ and lactate at two distinctly different rates. At -16 degrees C the more rapid process occurs at a rate of 40 s-1 and the slower at 3 s-1. The slower rate is identical to that assigned to the steady-state turnover of the enzyme in these conditions and therefore reflects the slow, rate-limiting rearrangement of protein structure which has been inferred from previous kinetic experiments. The fast phase of NADH oxidation, however, proceeds at a rate which coincides with that of the closure of a loop of polypeptide over the active site of the enzyme (sensed by the nitrotyrosine group, which protonates in response to the approach of glutamate 107, a residue situated on this mobile loop). We explain these results by proposing that: (i) both the slow and fast changes in protein structure must occur before the enzyme can accomplish the redox step, (ii) the enzyme-NADH (binary) complex exists in two, slowly interconverting forms, (iii) the structural change giving rise to this slow conformational equilibrium can also occur in the ternary (enzyme-NADH-pyruvate) complex and (iv) it is this step which limits the rate of the steady-state reaction. Both of the binary forms are able to bind pyruvate, but the rate of NADH oxidation in one of the forms is rapid, since it has already undergone this slow rearrangement. In this rapidly reacting form, it is the closure of the loop (not transfer of the hydride ion) which limits the rate at which the coenzyme is oxidized, while the slowly reacting form must undergo both loop-closure and the slow structural conversion before the redox reaction can occur.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987

The use of site-directed mutagenesis and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy to assign the fluorescence contributions of individual tryptophan residues in Bacillus stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenase

Adam D.B. Waldman; Anthony R. Clarke; Dale B. Wigley; Keith W. Hart; William N. Chia; David A. Barstow; Tony Atkinson; I. H. Munro; J. John Holbrook

Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to generate two mutant Bacillus stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenases: in one, Trp-150 has been replaced with a tyrosine residue and, in the other, both Trp-150 and -80 are replaced with tyrosines. Both enzymes are fully catalytically active and their affinities for substrates and coenzymes, and thermal stabilities are very similar to those of the native enzyme. Time-resolved fluorescence measurements using a synchrotron source have shown that all three tryptophans in the native enzyme fluoresce. By comparing the mutant and native enzymes it was possible, for the first time, to assign, unambiguously, lifetimes to the individual tryptophans: Trp-203 (7.4 ns), Trp-80 (2.35 ns) and Trp-150 (less than 0.3 ns). Trp-203 is responsible for 75-80% of the steady-state fluorescence emission, Trp-80 for 20%, and Trp-150 for less than 2%.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

13C-NMR and transient kinetic studies on lactate dehydrogenase [Cys(13CN)165]. Direct measurement of a rate-limiting rearrangement in protein structure

Adam D.B. Waldman; Berry Birdsall; Gordon C. K. Roberts; J. John Holbrook

Chemical modification of cysteine-165 in pig heart lactate dehydrogenase to produce lactate dehydrogenase [Cys(13CN)165] introduces an covalently bound, enriched 13C probe at a position adjacent to the active cen. The signal from the thiocyanate probe is clearly visible at 47 ppm relative to dioxane. On formation of binary complexes with NAD+ and NADH, no signal change is detected. Formation of the ternary complexes E-NADH-oxamate and E-NAD+-oxalate results in an upfield shift of the signal of 1.2 ppm. These results interpreted as demonstrating that binding of the substrate analogue induces a conformational change a position adjacent to the active centre. Exchange experiments in which the enzyme is poised in dynamic equilibrium between binary and ternary complexes show that the rate at which the probe senses a change environment is the same as the kinetically observed unimolecular event which limits the enzyme-catalyst reduction of pyruvate. The two processes show the same dependence on temperature, solvent composition and pH. These results indicate that the rate-limiting isomerisation corresponds to a rearrangement of the protein in the region of cysteine-165.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1987

Mapping motion in large proteins by single tryptophan probes inserted by site-directed mutagenesis: lactate dehydrogenase

Tony Atkinson; David A. Barstow; William N. Chia; Anthony R. Clarke; Keith W. Hart; Adam D.B. Waldman; Dale B. Wigley; Helen M. Wilks; J. John Holbrook


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1987

Site-directed mutagenesis of Bacillus stearothermophilus lactate dehydrogenase

Anthony R. Clarke; Dale B. Wigley; David A. Barstow; William N. Chia; Adam D.B. Waldman; Keith W. Hart; Tony Atkinson; J. John Holbrook


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1985

Low-temperature transient kinetic studies of peptide-loop movement in pig heart [Tyr(3NO2)237]lactate dehydrogenase

Adam D.B. Waldman; Anthony R. Clarke; J. John Holbrook


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1987

Substrate-binding to lactate dehydrogenase perturbs an intersubunit equilibrium sensed by engineered tryptophan-248

Adam D.B. Waldman; David A. Barstow; Anthony A. Clarke; Enrico Gratton; Tony Atkinson; J. John Holbrook

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Anthony R. Clarke

City University of New York

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Dale B. Wigley

London Research Institute

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