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Enzyme Architecture: The Effect of Replacement and Deletion Mutations of Loop 6 on Catalysis by Triosephosphate Isomerase

Zhai, X.; Go, M.K.; O'Donoghue, A.C.; Amyes, T.L.; Pegan, S.D.; Wang, Y.; Loria, J.P.; Mesecar, A.D.; Richard, J.P.

Enzyme Architecture: The Effect of Replacement and Deletion Mutations of Loop 6 on Catalysis by Triosephosphate Isomerase Thumbnail


Authors

X. Zhai

M.K. Go

T.L. Amyes

S.D. Pegan

Y. Wang

J.P. Loria

A.D. Mesecar

J.P. Richard



Abstract

Two mutations of the phosphodianion gripper loop in chicken muscle triosephosphate isomerase (cTIM) were examined: (1) the loop deletion mutant (LDM) formed by removal of residues 170–173 [Pompliano, D. L., et al. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 3186–3194] and (2) the loop 6 replacement mutant (L6RM), in which the N-terminal hinge sequence of TIM from eukaryotes, 166-PXW-168 (X = L or V), is replaced by the sequence from archaea, 166-PPE-168. The X-ray crystal structure of the L6RM shows a large displacement of the side chain of E168 from that for W168 in wild-type cTIM. Solution nuclear magnetic resonance data show that the L6RM results in significant chemical shift changes in loop 6 and surrounding regions, and that the binding of glycerol 3-phosphate (G3P) results in chemical shift changes for nuclei at the active site of the L6RM that are smaller than those of wild-type cTIM. Interactions with loop 6 of the L6RM stabilize the enediolate intermediate toward the elimination reaction catalyzed by the LDM. The LDM and L6RM result in 800000- and 23000-fold decreases, respectively, in kcat/Km for isomerization of GAP. Saturation of the LDM, but not the L6RM, by substrate and inhibitor phosphoglycolate is detected by steady-state kinetic analyses. We propose, on the basis of a comparison of X-ray crystal structures for wild-type TIM and the L6RM, that ligands bind weakly to the L6RM because a large fraction of the ligand binding energy is utilized to overcome destabilizing electrostatic interactions between the side chains of E168 and E129 that are predicted to develop in the loop-closed enzyme. Similar normalized yields of DHAP, d-DHAP, and d-GAP are formed in LDM- and L6RM-catalyzed reactions of GAP in D2O. The smaller normalized 12–13% yield of DHAP and d-DHAP observed for the mutant cTIM-catalyzed reactions compared with the 79% yield of these products for wild-type cTIM suggests that these mutations impair the transfer of a proton from O-2 to O-1 at the initial enediolate phosphate intermediate. No products are detected for the LDM-catalyzed isomerization reactions in D2O of [1-13C]GA and HPi, but the L6RM-catalyzed reaction in the presence of 0.020 M dianion gives a 2% yield of the isomerization product [2-13C,2-2H]GA.

Citation

Zhai, X., Go, M., O'Donoghue, A., Amyes, T., Pegan, S., Wang, Y., …Richard, J. (2014). Enzyme Architecture: The Effect of Replacement and Deletion Mutations of Loop 6 on Catalysis by Triosephosphate Isomerase. Biochemistry, 53(21), 3486-3501. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi500458t

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 15, 2014
Online Publication Date May 22, 2014
Publication Date Jun 3, 2014
Deposit Date Oct 22, 2015
Publicly Available Date Feb 15, 2016
Journal Biochemistry.
Print ISSN 0006-2960
Electronic ISSN 1520-4995
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 53
Issue 21
Pages 3486-3501
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/bi500458t

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Copyright Statement
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Biochemistry, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi500458t.





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