The use of Escherichia coli asparaginase II as
a drug for the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia
is complicated by the significant glutaminase side activity
of the enzyme. To develop enzyme forms with reduced glutaminase
activity, a number of variants with amino acid replacements
in the vicinity of the substrate binding site were constructed
and assayed for their kinetic and stability properties.
We found that replacements of Asp248 affected glutamine
turnover much more strongly than asparagine hydrolysis.
In the wild-type enzyme, N248 modulates substrate binding
to a neighboring subunit by hydrogen bonding to side chains
that directly interact with the substrate. In variant N248A, the
loss of transition state stabilization caused by the mutation was
15 kJ mol−1 for l-glutamine compared to
4 kJ mol−1 for l-aspartic β-hydroxamate
and 7 kJ mol−1 for l-asparagine. Smaller
differences were seen with other N248 variants. Modeling studies
suggested that the selective reduction of glutaminase activity
is the result of small conformational changes that affect active-site
residues and catalytically relevant water molecules.