Enhancement of methylesterase activity of the response
regulator CheB is dependent upon phosphorylation of the
N-terminal regulatory domain of the enzyme. This domain
plays a dual role in the regulation of methylesterase activity
with an inhibitory effect in the unphosphorylated state
and a stimulatory effect in the phosphorylated state. Structural
studies of the unphosphorylated state have indicated that
the basis for the regulatory domain's inhibitory effect
is partial blockage of access of substrate to the active
site suggesting that the activation upon phosphorylation
involves a repositioning of the two domains with respect
to each other. We report in this study evidence for phosphorylation-dependent
conformational changes in CheB. Differences in rates of
proteolytic cleavage by trypsin between the phosphorylated
and unphosphorylated states have been observed at three
sites in the protein with one site, 113, within the regulatory
domain and two sites, 134 and 148, lying within the interdomain
linker. These results support the hypothesis for the mechanism
for the activation of CheB wherein phosphorylation of a
specific aspartate residue within the N-terminal domain
results in a propagated conformational change within the
regulatory domain leading to a repositioning of its two
domains. Presumably, structural changes in the regulatory
domain of CheB facilitate a repositioning of the N- and
C-terminal domains, leading to stimulation of methylesterase
activity.