Reijo Lahti
University of Turku
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Featured researches published by Reijo Lahti.
Analytical Biochemistry | 1981
Jukka Heinonen; Reijo Lahti
Abstract A new and convenient method for the determination of P i was developed. Phosphomolybdate is measured colorimetrically, without reduction to molybdenum blue, by dissolving the whole assay mixture in acetone, where phosphomolybdate is bright yellow. The hydrolysis of acid-labile phosphates (e.g., creatine phosphate) causes no problems, because extra molybdate is complexed with citrate immediately after the color has been developed. Strong reductants and SH compounds which interfere, if present in high concentrations, are eliminated by adding H 2 O 2 . Detergents, organic bases, protein, and sucrose do not interfere. The assay is as sensitive as most modifications of the Fiske-SubbaRow method. In the routine procedure the useful range is 50–1500 nmol of P i . The application of the method to the assay of inorganic pyrophosphatase in the cells of Escherichia coli is described.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 1992
Barry S. Cooperman; Alexander A. Baykov; Reijo Lahti
Soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) are essential enzymes that are important for controlling the cellular levels of inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi). Although prokaryotic and eukaryotic PPases differ substantially in amino acid sequence, recent evidence now demonstrates clearly that PPases throughout evolution show a remarkable level of conservation of both an extended active site structure, which has the character of a mini-mineral, and a catalytic mechanism. PPases require several (three or four) Mg2+ ions at the active site for activity and many of the 15-17 fully conserved active site residues are directly involved in the binding of metal ions. Each of the eight microscopic rate constants that has been evaluated for the PPases from both Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae is quite similar in magnitude for the two enzymes, supporting the notion of a conserved mechanism.
FEBS Letters | 1998
Toshio Shintani; Toshio Uchiumi; Tomoki Yonezawa; Anu Salminen; Alexander A. Baykov; Reijo Lahti; Akira Hachimori
An open reading frame located in the COTF‐TETB intergenic region of Bacillus subtilis was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli and shown to encode inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase). The isolated enzyme is Mn2+‐activated, like the authentic PPase isolated from B. subtilis. Although 13 functionally important active site residues are conserved in all 31 soluble PPase sequences so far identified, only two of them are conserved in B. subtilis PPase. This suggests that B. subtilis PPase represents a new family of soluble PPases (a Bs family), putative members of which were found in Archaeoglobus fulgidus, Methanococcus jannaschii, Streptococcus mutans and Streptococcus gordonii.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
P. Heikinheimo; V. Tuominen; A.-K. Ahonen; A. Teplyakov; Barry S. Cooperman; Alexander A. Baykov; Reijo Lahti; Adrian Goldman
The wealth of kinetic and structural information makes inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) a good model system to study the details of enzymatic phosphoryl transfer. The enzyme accelerates metal-complexed phosphoryl transfer 1010-fold: but how? Our structures of the yeast PPase product complex at 1.15 Å and fluoride-inhibited complex at 1.9 Å visualize the active site in three different states: substrate-bound, immediate product bound, and relaxed product bound. These span the steps around chemical catalysis and provide strong evidence that a water molecule (Onu) directly attacks PPi with a pKa vastly lowered by coordination to two metal ions and D117. They also suggest that a low-barrier hydrogen bond (LBHB) forms between D117 and Onu, in part because of steric crowding by W100 and N116. Direct visualization of the double bonds on the phosphates appears possible. The flexible side chains at the top of the active site absorb the motion involved in the reaction, which may help accelerate catalysis. Relaxation of the product allows a new nucleophile to be generated and creates symmetry in the elementary catalytic steps on the enzyme. We are thus moving closer to understanding phosphoryl transfer in PPases at the quantum mechanical level. Ultra-high resolution structures can thus tease out overlapping complexes and so are as relevant to discussion of enzyme mechanism as structures produced by time-resolved crystallography.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2011
Alexander A. Baykov; Heidi Tuominen; Reijo Lahti
Regulatory CBS (cystathionine β-synthase) domains exist as two or four tandem copies in thousands of cytosolic and membrane-associated proteins from all kingdoms of life. Mutations in the CBS domains of human enzymes and membrane channels are associated with an array of hereditary diseases. Four CBS domains encoded within a single polypeptide or two identical polypeptides (each having a pair of CBS domains at the subunit interface) form a highly conserved disk-like structure. CBS domains act as autoinhibitory regulatory units in some proteins and activate or further inhibit protein function upon binding to adenosine nucleotides (AMP, ADP, ATP, S-adenosyl methionine, NAD, diadenosine polyphosphates). As a result of the differential effects of the nucleotides, CBS domain-containing proteins can sense cell energy levels. Significant conformational changes are induced in CBS domains by bound ligands, highlighting the structural basis for their effects.
FEBS Letters | 1999
Toni Sivula; Anu Salminen; Alexey N. Parfenyev; Pekka Pohjanjoki; Adrian Goldman; Barry S. Cooperman; Alexander A. Baykov; Reijo Lahti
Based on the primary structure, soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases can be divided into two families which exhibit no sequence similarity to each other. Family I, comprising most of the known pyrophosphatase sequences, can be further divided into prokaryotic, plant and animal/fungal pyrophosphatases. Interestingly, plant pyrophosphatases bear a closer similarity to prokaryotic than to animal/fungal pyrophosphatases. Only 17 residues are conserved in all 37 pyrophosphatases of family I and remarkably, 15 of these residues are located at the active site. Subunit interface residues are conserved in animal/fungal but not in prokaryotic pyrophosphatases.
Progress in molecular and subcellular biology | 1999
Alexander A. Baykov; Barry S. Cooperman; Adrian Goldman; Reijo Lahti
Pyrophosphate (PPi) is the smallest member of the polyphosphate family and is formed by two phosphate (Pi) residues linked by a phosphoanhydride bond. A specific enzyme hydrolyzing PPi to Pi was discovered in animal tissues in 1928 (Kay) and later in a great many other organisms and cell types, in virtually all in which it has been sought. Its initial name was “pyrophosphatase”, later elongated with a questionable “inorganic”.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990
Reijo Lahti; Lee F. Kolakowski; Jukka Heinonen; Mauno Vihinen; Katariina Pohjanoksa; Barry S. Cooperman
The alignments of the amino acid sequences of inorganic pyrophosphatase (PPase) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Y1-PPase, 286 amino acids) and Escherichia coli (E-PPase, 175 amino acids) are examined in the light of crystallographic and chemical modification results placing specific amino acid residues at the active site of the yeast enzyme. The major results are: (1) the full E-PPase sequence aligns within residues 28-225 of Y1-PPase, raising the possibility that the N-terminal and C-terminal portions of Y1-PPase may not be essential for activity, and (2) that whereas the overall identity between the two sequences is only modest (22-27% depending on the choice of alignment parameters), of some 17 putative active site residues, 14-16 are identical between Y-PPase and E-PPase. PPase thus appears to be an example of enzymes from widely divergent species that conserve common functional elements within the context of substantial overall sequence variation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Igor P. Fabrichniy; Lari Lehtiö; Marko Tammenkoski; Anton B. Zyryanov; Esko Oksanen; Alexander A. Baykov; Reijo Lahti; Adrian Goldman
We report the first crystal structures of a family II pyrophosphatase complexed with a substrate analogue, imidodiphosphate (PNP). These provide new insights into the catalytic reaction mechanism of this enzyme family. We were able to capture the substrate complex both by fluoride inhibition and by site-directed mutagenesis providing complementary snapshots of the Michaelis complex. Structures of both the fluoride-inhibited wild type and the H98Q variant of the PNP-Bacillus subtilis pyrophosphatase complex show a unique trinuclear metal center. Each metal ion coordinates a terminal oxygen on the electrophilic phosphate and a lone pair on the putative nucleophile, thus placing it in line with the scissile bond without any coordination by protein. The nucleophile moves further away from the electrophilic phosphorus site, to the opposite side of the trimetal plane, upon binding of substrate. In comparison with earlier product complexes, the side chain of Lys296 has swung in and so three positively charged side chains, His98, Lys205 and Lys296, now surround the bridging nitrogen in PNP. Finally, one of the active sites in the wild-type structure appears to show evidence of substrate distortion. Binding to the enzyme may thus strain the substrate and thus enhance the catalytic rate.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011
Heidi H. Luoto; Georgiy A. Belogurov; Alexander A. Baykov; Reijo Lahti; Anssi M. Malinen
Membrane pyrophosphatases (PPases), divided into K+-dependent and K+-independent subfamilies, were believed to pump H+ across cell membranes until a recent demonstration that some K+-dependent PPases function as Na+ pumps. Here, we have expressed seven evolutionarily important putative PPases in Escherichia coli and estimated their hydrolytic, Na+ transport, and H+ transport activities as well as their K+ and Na+ requirements in inner membrane vesicles. Four of these enzymes (from Anaerostipes caccae, Chlorobium limicola, Clostridium tetani, and Desulfuromonas acetoxidans) were identified as K+-dependent Na+ transporters. Phylogenetic analysis led to the identification of a monophyletic clade comprising characterized and predicted Na+-transporting PPases (Na+-PPases) within the K+-dependent subfamily. H+-transporting PPases (H+-PPases) are more heterogeneous and form at least three independent clades in both subfamilies. These results suggest that rather than being a curious rarity, Na+-PPases predominantly constitute the K+-dependent subfamily. Furthermore, Na+-PPases possibly preceded H+-PPases in evolution, and transition from Na+ to H+ transport may have occurred in several independent enzyme lineages. Site-directed mutagenesis studies facilitated the identification of a specific Glu residue that appears to be central in the transport mechanism. This residue is located in the cytoplasm-membrane interface of transmembrane helix 6 in Na+-PPases but shifted to within the membrane or helix 5 in H+-PPases. These results contribute to the prediction of the transport specificity and K+ dependence for a particular membrane PPase sequence based on its position in the phylogenetic tree, identity of residues in the K+ dependence signature, and position of the membrane-located Glu residue.