Starch phosphorylase from Corynebacterium callunae
is a dimeric protein in which each mol of 90 kDa subunit
contains 1 mol pyridoxal 5′-phosphate as an active-site
cofactor. To determine the mechanism by which phosphate
or sulfate ions bring about a greater than 500-fold stabilization
against irreversible inactivation at elevated temperatures
(≥50 °C), enzyme/oxyanion interactions and their
role during thermal denaturation of phosphorylase have
been studied. By binding to a protein site distinguishable
from the catalytic site with dissociation constants of
Ksulfate = 4.5 mM and Kphosphate
≈ 16 mM, dianionic oxyanions induce formation of a more
compact structure of phosphorylase, manifested by (a) an
increase by about 5% in the relative composition of the
α-helical secondary structure, (b) reduced 1H/2H
exchange, and (c) protection of a cofactor fluorescence
against quenching by iodide. Irreversible loss of enzyme
activity is triggered by the release into solution of pyridoxal
5′-phosphate, and results from subsequent intermolecular
aggregation driven by hydrophobic interactions between
phosphorylase subunits that display a temperature-dependent
degree of melting of secondary structure. By specifically
increasing the stability of the dimer structure of phosphorylase
(probably due to tightened intersubunit contacts), phosphate,
and sulfate, this indirectly (1) preserves a functional
active site up to ≈50 °C, and (2) stabilizes the
covalent protein cofactor linkage up to ≈70 °C.
The effect on thermostability shows a sigmoidal and saturatable
dependence on the concentration of phosphate, with an apparent
binding constant at 50 °C of ≈25 mM. The extra stability
conferred by oxyanion–ligand binding to starch phosphorylase
is expressed as a dramatic shift of the entire denaturation
pathway to a ≈20 °C higher value on the temperature
scale.