Site-specific mutagenesis was used to explore the roles of the side chains of residues Lys-328 and Asp-153 in Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase. The D153H enzyme exhibits a 3.5-fold decrease in activity at pH 8.0 compared to that of the wild-type enzyme, while a double mutant D153H/K328H exhibits a 16-fold decrease in activity under these conditions. However, the Km values for both enzymes, employing the substrate p-nitrophenyl phosphate, are lower than the value for the wild-type enzyme. The Ki for phosphate, which is pH- and Mg(2+)-dependent, is decreased for the D153H enzyme and increased for the D153H/K328H enzyme. Relative to the wild-type enzyme, both mutant enzymes bind Mg2+ more weakly and undergo a time-dependent activation induced by Mg2+. The half-time of the activation process is independent of the Mg2+ concentration, indicating that the activation most probably involves a conformational change. The pH versus activity profiles of both enzymes are altered relative to that of the wild-type enzyme and exhibit greatly enhanced activity, relative to that of the wild-type enzyme, at high pH values. The pre-steady-state kinetics for the D153H and D153H/K328H enzymes exhibit a transient burst of product formation at pH 8.0, under conditions at which the wild-type enzyme exhibits no transient burst, indicating that at pH 8.0 the hydrolysis of the covalent enzyme-phosphate complex is rate-determining and not the release of phosphate from the noncovalent enzyme-phosphate complex as is observed for the wild-type enzyme. Therefore, these mutations are directly influencing catalysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)