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Dive into the research topics where Gary D. Brayer is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary D. Brayer.


Biochemistry | 2002

Mechanistic analyses of catalysis in human pancreatic alpha-amylase: detailed kinetic and structural studies of mutants of three conserved carboxylic acids.

Edwin H. Rydberg; Chunmin Li; Robert Maurus; Christopher M. Overall; Gary D. Brayer; Stephen G. Withers

The roles of three conserved active site carboxylic acids (D197, E233, and D300) in the catalytic mechanism of human pancreatic alpha-amylase (HPA) were studied by utilizing site-directed mutagenesis in combination with structural and kinetic analyses of the resultant enzymes. All three residues were mutated to both alanine and the respective amide, and a double alanine mutant (E233A/D300A) was also generated. Structural analyses demonstrated that there were no significant differences in global fold for the mutant enzymes. Kinetic analyses were performed on the mutants, utilizing a range of substrates. All results suggested that D197 was the nucleophile, as virtually all activity (>10(5)-fold decrease in k(cat) values) was lost for the enzymes mutated at this position when assayed with several substrates. The significantly greater second-order rate constant of E233 mutants on activated substrates (k(cat)/K(m) value for alpha-maltotriosyl fluoride = 15 s(-)(1) mM(-)(1)) compared with unactivated substrates (k(cat)/K(m) value for maltopentaose = 0.0030 s(-)(1) mM(-)(1)) strongly suggested that E233 is the general acid catalyst, as did the pH-activity profiles. Transglycosylation was favored over hydrolysis for the reactions of several of the enzymes mutated at D300. At the least, this suggests an overall impairment of the catalytic mechanism where the reaction then proceeds using the better acceptor (oligosaccharide instead of water). This may also suggest that D300 plays a crucial role in enzymic interactions with the nucleophilic water during the hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond.


Protein Science | 2005

Structural and mechanistic studies of chloride induced activation of human pancreatic alpha-amylase

Robert Maurus; Anjuman Begum; Hsin-Hen Kuo; Andrew Racaza; Shin Numao; Carsten Andersen; Jeppe Wegener Tams; Jesper Vind; Christopher M. Overall; Stephen G. Withers; Gary D. Brayer

The mechanism of allosteric activation of α‐amylase by chloride has been studied through structural and kinetic experiments focusing on the chloride‐dependent N298S variant of human pancreatic α‐amylase (HPA) and a chloride‐independent TAKA‐amylase. Kinetic analysis of the HPA variant clearly demonstrates the pronounced activating effect of chloride ion binding on reaction rates and its effect on the pH‐dependence of catalysis. Structural alterations observed in the N298S variant upon chloride ion binding suggest that the chloride ion plays a variety of roles that serve to promote catalysis. One of these is having a strong influence on the positioning of the acid/base catalyst residue E233. Absence of chloride ion results in multiple conformations for this residue and unexpected enzymatic products. Chloride ion and N298 also appear to stabilize a helical region of polypeptide chain from which projects the flexible substrate binding loop unique to chloride‐dependent α‐amylases. This structural feature also serves to properly orient the catalytically essential residue D300. Comparative analyses show that the chloride‐independent α‐amylases compensate for the absence of bound chloride by substituting a hydrophobic core, altering the manner in which substrate interactions are made and shifting the placement of N298. These evolutionary differences presumably arise in response to alternative operating environments or the advantage gained in a particular product profile. Attempts to engineer chloride‐dependence into the chloride‐independent TAKA‐amylase point out the complexity of this system, and the fact that a multitude of factors play a role in binding chloride ion in the chloride‐dependent α‐amylases.


Biochemical Journal | 1998

Structural and spectroscopic studies of azide complexes of horse heart myoglobin and the His-64-->Thr variant.

Robert Maurus; R Bogumil; Nham T. Nguyen; and A. Grant Mauk; Gary D. Brayer

The high-resolution X-ray crystallographic structures of horse heart azidometmyoglobin complexes of the wild-type protein and the His-64-->Thr variant have been determined to 2.0 and 1.8 A respectively. Azide binds to wild-type metmyoglobin in a bent configuration with an Fe-N-1-N-3 angle of 119 degrees and is oriented into the distal crevice in the direction of Ile-107. The proximity of the His-64 NE2 atom to the N-1 atom of the bound azide indicates stabilization of the ligand by the His-64 side chain through hydrogen bonding. In addition, structural characterization of wild-type horse heart azidometmyoglobin establishes that the only structural change induced by ligand binding is a small movement of the Leu-29 side chain away from the azide ligand. EPR and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy were used to characterize the myoglobin azide complexes further. EPR spectroscopy revealed that, in contrast with wild-type azidometmyoglobin, two slightly different low-spin species are formed by azide bound to the His-64-->Thr variant both in solution and in a polycrystalline sample. One of these low-spin species has a greater relative intensity, with g values very similar to those of the azide complex of the wild-type protein. These EPR results together with structural information on this variant indicate the presence of two distinct conformations of bound azide, with one form predominating. The major conformation is comparable to that formed by wild-type myoglobin in which azide is oriented into the distal crevice. In the minor conformation the azide is oriented towards the exterior of the protein.


Biochemistry | 2008

Alternative catalytic anions differentially modulate human alpha-amylase activity and specificity

Robert Maurus; Anjuman Begum; Leslie K. Williams; Jason R. Fredriksen; Ran Zhang; Stephen G. Withers; Gary D. Brayer

A mechanistic study of the essential allosteric activation of human pancreatic alpha-amylase by chloride ion has been conducted by exploring a wide range of anion substitutions through kinetic and structural experiments. Surprisingly, kinetic studies indicate that the majority of these alternative anions can induce some level of enzymatic activity despite very different atomic geometries, sizes, and polyatomic natures. These data and subsequent structural studies attest to the remarkable plasticity of the chloride binding site, even though earlier structural studies of wild-type human pancreatic alpha-amylase suggested this site would likely be restricted to chloride binding. Notably, no apparent relationship is observed between anion binding affinity and relative activity, emphasizing the complexity of the relationship between chloride binding parameters and the activation mechanism that facilitates catalysis. Of the anions studied, particularly intriguing in terms of observed trends in substrate kinetics and their novel atomic compositions were the nitrite, nitrate, and azide anions, the latter of which was found to enhance the relative activity of human pancreatic alpha-amylase by nearly 5-fold. Structural studies have provided considerable insight into the nature of the interactions formed in the chloride binding site by the nitrite and nitrate anions. To probe the role such interactions play in allosteric activation, further structural analyses were conducted in the presence of acarbose, which served as a sensitive reporter molecule of the catalytic ability of these modified enzymes to carry out its expected rearrangement by human pancreatic alpha-amylase. These studies show that the largest anion of this group, nitrate, can comfortably fit in the chloride binding pocket, making all the necessary hydrogen bonds. Further, this anion has nearly the same ability to activate human pancreatic alpha-amylase and leads to the production of the same acarbose product. In contrast, while nitrite considerably boosts the relative activity of human pancreatic alpha-amylase, its presence leads to changes in the electrostatic environment and active site conformations that substantially modify catalytic parameters and produce a novel acarbose rearrangement product. In particular, nitrite-substituted human pancreatic alpha-amylase demonstrates the unique ability to cleave acarbose into its acarviosine and maltose parts and carry out a previously unseen product elongation. In a completely unexpected turn of events, structural studies show that in azide-bound human pancreatic alpha-amylase, the normally resident chloride ion is retained in its binding site and an azide anion is found bound in an embedded side pocket in the substrate binding cleft. These results clearly indicate that azide enzymatic activation occurs via a mechanism distinct from that of the nitrite and nitrate anions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Introduction and characterization of a functionally linked metal ion binding site at the exposed heme edge of myoglobin

C.L Hunter; Robert Maurus; M.R Mauk; H Lee; Emma Lloyd Raven; H Tong; Nham T. Nguyen; M. Smith; Gary D. Brayer; and A. Grant Mauk

A binding site for metal ions has been created on the surface of horse heart myoglobin (Mb) near the heme 6-propionate group by replacing K45 and K63 with glutamyl residues. One-dimensional 1H NMR spectroscopy indicates that Mn2+ binds in the vicinity of the heme 6-propionate as anticipated, and potentiometric titrations establish that the affinity of the new site for Mn2+ is 1.28(4) × 104 M−1 (pH 6.96, ionic strength I = 17.2 μM, 25°C). In addition, these substitutions lower the reduction potential of the protein and increase the pKa for the water molecule coordinated to the heme iron of metmyoglobin. The peroxidase [2,2′-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid), ABTS, as substrate] and the Mn2+-peroxidase activity of the variant are both increased ≈3-fold. In contrast to wild-type Mb, both the affinity for azide and the midpoint potential of the variant are significantly influenced by the addition of Mn2+. The structure of the variant has been determined by x-ray crystallography to define the coordination environment of bound Mn2+ and Cd2+. Although slight differences are observed between the geometry of the binding of the two metal ions, both are hexacoordinate, and neither involves coordination by E63.


Biochemistry | 2003

Insights into the evolution of allosteric properties. The NADH binding site of hexameric type II citrate synthases.

Robert Maurus; Nham T. Nguyen; David J. Stokell; Ayeda Ayed; Philip G. Hultin; Harry W. Duckworth; Gary D. Brayer


Biochemistry | 1995

The proximal ligand variant His93Tyr of horse heart myoglobin.

D.P Hildebrand; D.L Burk; Robert Maurus; J.C Ferrer; Gary D. Brayer; and A. Grant Mauk


Biochemistry | 2005

Acarbose Rearrangement Mechanism Implied by the Kinetic and Structural Analysis of Human Pancreatic alpha-Amylase in Complex with Analogues and Their Elongated Counterparts

Chunmin Li; Anjuman Begum; Shin Numao; Kwan Hwa Park; Stephen G. Withers; Gary D. Brayer


Biochemistry | 2002

Probing the role of the chloride ion in the mechanism of human pancreatic alpha-amylase.

Shin Numao; Robert Maurus; Gary Sidhu; Yili Wang; Christopher M. Overall; Gary D. Brayer; Stephen G. Withers


Biochemistry | 2001

Comparative Analysis of Folding and Substrate Binding Sites between Regulated Hexameric Type II Citrate Synthases and Unregulated Dimeric Type I Enzymes.

Nham T. Nguyen; Robert Maurus; David J. Stokell; Ayeda Ayed; Harry W. Duckworth; Gary D. Brayer

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Robert Maurus

University of British Columbia

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Stephen G. Withers

University of British Columbia

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and A. Grant Mauk

University of British Columbia

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Anjuman Begum

University of British Columbia

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Christopher M. Overall

University of British Columbia

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Nham T. Nguyen

University of British Columbia

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Shin Numao

University of British Columbia

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Ayeda Ayed

University of Manitoba

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D.L Burk

University of British Columbia

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