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Dive into the research topics where David E. Ash is active.

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Featured researches published by David E. Ash.


Journal of Nutrition | 2004

Structure and Function of Arginases

David E. Ash

The arginases catalyze the divalent cation dependent hydrolysis of L-arginine to produce L-ornithine and urea. Although traditionally considered in terms of its role as the final enzyme of the urea cycle, the enzyme is found in a variety of nonhepatic tissues. These findings suggest that the enzyme may have other functions in addition to its role in nitrogen metabolism. High-resolution crystal structures have been determined for recombinant rat liver (type I) arginase and for recombinant human kidney (type II) arginase, their variants, and complexes with products and inhibitors. Each identical subunit of the trimeric enzyme contains an active site that lies at the bottom of a 15 A deep cleft. The 2 essential Mn(II) ions are located at the bottom of this cleft, separated by approximately 3.3 A and bridged by oxygens derived from 2 aspartic acid residues and a solvent-derived hydroxide. This metal bridging hydroxide is proposed to be the nucleophile that attacks the guanidinium carbon of substrate arginine. On the basis of this proposed mechanism, boronic acid inhibitors of the enzyme have been synthesized and characterized kinetically and structurally. These inhibitors display slow-onset inhibition at the pH optimum of the enzyme, and are found as tetrahedral species at the active site, as determined by X-ray diffraction. The potent inhibition of arginases I and II by these compounds has not only delineated key enzyme-substrate interactions, but has also led to a greater understanding of the role of arginase in nonhepatic tissues.


Biochemistry | 2003

Human Arginase II: Crystal Structure and Physiological Role in Male and Female Sexual Arousal†,‡

Evis Cama; Diana M. Colleluori; Frances A. Emig; Hyunshun Shin; Soo Woong Kim; Noel N. Kim; Abdulmaged M. Traish; David E. Ash; David W. Christianson

Arginase is a binuclear manganese metalloenzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of l-arginine to form l-ornithine and urea. The X-ray crystal structure of a fully active, truncated form of human arginase II complexed with a boronic acid transition state analogue inhibitor has been determined at 2.7 A resolution. This structure is consistent with the hydrolysis of l-arginine through a metal-activated hydroxide mechanism. Given that human arginase II appears to play a role in regulating l-arginine bioavailability to NO synthase in human penile corpus cavernosum smooth muscle, the inhibition of human arginase II is a potential new strategy for the treatment of erectile dysfunction [Kim, N. N., Cox, J. D., Baggio, R. F., Emig, F. A., Mistry, S., Harper, S. L., Speicher, D. W., Morris, S. M., Ash, D. E., Traish, A. M., and Christianson, D. W. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 2678-2688]. Since NO synthase is found in human clitoral corpus cavernosum and vagina, we hypothesized that human arginase II is similarly present in these tissues and functions to regulate l-arginine bioavailability to NO synthase. Accordingly, hemodynamic studies conducted with a boronic acid arginase inhibitor in vivo are summarized, suggesting that the extrahepatic arginase plays a role in both male and female sexual arousal. Therefore, arginase II is a potential target for the treatment of male and female sexual arousal disorders.


Carlsberg Research Communications | 1988

Biosynthesis of Δ-aminolevulinate in greening barley leaves. IX. Structure of the substrate, mode of gabaculine inhibition, and the catalytic mechanism of glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase

J. Kenneth Hoober; Albert Kahn; David E. Ash; Simon P. Gough; C. Gamini Kannangara

Glutamic acid 1-semialdehyde hydrochloride was synthesized and purified. Its prior structural characterization was extended and confirmed by1H NMR spectroscopy and chemical analyses. In aqueous solution at pH 1 to 2 glutamic acid 1-semialdehyde exists in a stable hydrated form, but at pH 8.0 it has a half-life of 3 to 4 min. Spontaneous degradation of the material at pH 8.0 generated some undefined condensation products, but coincidentally a significant amount isomerized to 5-aminolevulinate. At pH 6.8 to 7.0, glutamate 1-semialdehyde is sufficiently stable to permit routine and reproducible assay for glutamate 1-semialdehyde aminotransferase activity. Only about 20% of the enzyme extracted from chloroplasts was sensitive to inactivation by gabaculine with no pretreatment. However, when the enzyme was exposed to 5-aminolevulinate, levulinate or 4,5-dioxovalerate in the absence of glutamate 1-semialdehyde, it was completely inactivated by gabaculine; 4,6-dioxoheptanoate had no effect on the enzyme. These results lead to the hypothesis that the aminotransferase exists in the chloroplast in a complex with pyridoxamine phosphate, which must be converted to the pyridoxal form before it can form a stable adduct with gabaculine. We propose that the enzyme catalyzes the conversion of glutamate 1-semialdehyde to 5-aminolevulinate via 4,5-diaminovalerate.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Subunit-Subunit Interactions in Trimeric Arginase GENERATION OF ACTIVE MONOMERS BY MUTATION OF A SINGLE AMINO ACID

Lopeti T. Lavulo; Thomas M. Sossong; Michael R. Brigham-Burke; Michael L. Doyle; J. David Cox; David W. Christianson; David E. Ash

The structure of the trimeric, manganese metalloenzyme, rat liver arginase, has been previously determined at 2.1-Å resolution (Kanyo, Z. F., Scolnick, L. R., Ash, D. E., and Christianson, D. W., (1996) Nature383, 554–557). A key feature of this structure is a novel S-shaped oligomerization motif at the carboxyl terminus of the protein that mediates ∼54% of the intermonomer contacts. Arg-308, located within this oligomerization motif, nucleates a series of intramonomer and intermonomer salt links. In contrast to the trimeric wild-type enzyme, the R308A, R308E, and R308K variants of arginase exist as monomeric species, as determined by gel filtration and analytical ultracentrifugation, indicating that mutation of Arg-308 shifts the equilibrium for trimer dissociation by at least a factor of 105. These monomeric arginase variants are catalytically active, with k cat/K m values that are 13–17% of the value for wild-type enzyme. The arginase variants are characterized by decreased temperature stability relative to the wild-type enzyme. Differential scanning calorimetry shows that the midpoint temperature for unfolding of the Arg-308 variants is in the range of 63.6–65.5 °C, while the corresponding value for the wild-type enzyme is 70 °C. The three-dimensional structure of the R308K variant has been determined at 3-Å resolution. At the high protein concentrations utilized in the crystallizations, this variant exists as a trimer, but weakened salt link interactions are observed for Lys-308.


Biochemistry | 1992

Oxygen-18 isotopic carbon-13 NMR shift as proof that bifunctional peptidylglycine .alpha.-amidating enzyme is a monooxygenase

David J. Merkler; Raviraj Kulathila; Angelo P. Consalvo; Stanley D. Young; David E. Ash

: The biosynthesis of C-terminal alpha-amidated peptides from their corresponding C-terminal glycine-extended precursors is catalyzed by peptidylglycine alpha-amidating enzyme (alpha-AE) in a reaction that requires copper, ascorbate, and molecular oxygen. Using bifunctional type A rat alpha-AE, we have shown that O2 is the source of the alpha-carbonyl oxygen of pyruvate produced during the amidation of dansyl-Tyr-Val-[alpha-13C]-D-Ala, as demonstrated by the 18O isotopic shift in the 13C NMR spectrum of [alpha-13C]lactate generated from [alpha-13C]pyruvate in the presence of lactate dehydrogenase and NADH. In addition, one-to-one stoichiometries have been determined for glyoxylate formed/dansyl-Tyr-Val-Gly consumed, pyruvate formed/dansyl-Tyr-Val-D-Ala consumed, dansyl-Tyr-Val-NH2 formed/ascorbate oxidized, and dansyl-Tyr-Val-NH2 formed/O2 consumed. Quantitative coupling of NADH oxidation to dansyl-Tyr-Val-NH2 production using Neurospora crassa semidehydroascorbate reductase showed that two one-electron reductions by ascorbate occurred per alpha-AE turnover. The stoichiometry of approximately 1.0 dansyl-Tyr-Val-NH2 produced/ascorbate oxidized observed in the absence of a semidehydroascorbate trap resulted from the disproportionation of two semidehydroascorbate molecules to ascorbate and dehydroascorbate.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1992

Crystallization and oligomeric structure of rat liver arginase

Zoltan F. Kanyo; Cheau-Yun Chen; Farzaneh Daghigh; David E. Ash; David W. Christianson

Rat liver arginase, a manganese-metalloenzyme, has been crystallized from polyethylene glycol 8000 in N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)glycine (Bicine) buffer at pH 8.5. Crystals form as either cubes or pyramids and belong to space group P3(1) (or P3(2)) with hexagonal unit cell dimensions a = b = 88.9 A, c = 114.8 A, or a = b = 88.5 A, c = 104.5 A; the variation along the c axis does not correlate with the external crystal morphology of cube or pyramid-shaped. X-ray diffraction data are measured to a limiting resolution of 2.4 A. Given the volume constraints of the unit cell it is likely that rat liver arginase is a trimer, with three 35,000 Da monomers in the asymmetric unit. This resolves a persistent ambiguity regarding the oligomeric structure of this enzyme.


FEBS Letters | 1995

The irreversible inactivation of two copper-dependent monooxygenases by sulfite: peptidylglycine α-amidating enzyme and dopamine β-monooxygenase

David J. Merkler; Raviraj Kulathila; Wilson A. Francisco; David E. Ash; Joseph Bell

Peptidylglycine α‐amidating enzyme (α‐AE) and dopamine β‐monooxygenase (DβM), two copper‐dependent monooxygenases that have catalytic and structural similarities, are irreversibly inactivated by sodium sulfite in a time‐ and concentration‐dependent manner. Studies with α‐AE show that the sulfite‐mediated inactivation is dependent on the presence of redox active transition metals free in solution, with Cu(II) being the most effective in supporting the inactivation reaction. Sulfite inactivation of α‐AE is specific for the monooxygenase reaction of this bifunctional enzyme and amidated peptides provide protection against the inactivation. Consequently, the sulfite‐mediated inactivation of α‐AE and DβM most likely results from the transition metal‐catalyzed oxidation of sulfite to the sulfite radical, SO3 −.


Nature | 1996

Structure of a unique binuclear manganese cluster in arginase

Zoltan F. Kanyo; Laura R. Scolnick; David E. Ash; David W. Christianson


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1994

Inhibition of Rat Liver Arginase by an Intermediate in NO Biosynthesis, NG-Hydroxy-L-arginine: Implications for the Regulation of Nitric Oxide Biosynthesis by Arginase

Farzaneh Daghigh; J. M. Fukuto; David E. Ash


Biochemistry | 2001

Probing Erectile Function: S-(2-Boronoethyl)-l-Cysteine Binds to Arginase as a Transition State Analogue and Enhances Smooth Muscle Relaxation in Human Penile Corpus Cavernosum†,‡

Noel N. Kim; Cox Jd; Baggio Rf; Frances A. Emig; Mistry Sk; Sandy Harper; David W. Speicher; Morris Sm; David E. Ash; Abdulmaged M. Traish; David W. Christianson

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David J. Merkler

University of South Florida

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Evis Cama

University of Pennsylvania

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Laura R. Scolnick

University of Pennsylvania

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Joseph J. Villafranca

Pennsylvania State University

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