3 research outputs found
A Tale of Two Isomerases: Compact versus Extended Active Sites in Ketosteroid Isomerase and Phosphoglucose Isomerase
Understanding the catalytic efficiency and specificity
of enzymes
is a fundamental question of major practical and conceptual importance
in biochemistry. Although progress in biochemical and structural studies
has enriched our knowledge of enzymes, the role in enzyme catalysis
of residues that are not nearest neighbors of the reacting substrate
molecule is largely unexplored experimentally. Here computational
active site predictors, THEMATICS and POOL, were employed to identify
functionally important residues that are not in direct contact with
the reacting substrate molecule. These predictions then guided experiments
to explore the active sites of two isomerases, <i>Pseudomonas
putida</i> ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) and human phosphoglucose
isomerase (PGI), as prototypes for very different types of predicted
active sites. Both KSI and PGI are members of EC 5.3 and catalyze
similar reactions, but they represent significantly different degrees
of remote residue participation, as predicted by THEMATICS and POOL.
For KSI, a compact active site of mostly first-shell residues is predicted,
but for PGI, an extended active site in which residues in the first,
second, and third layers around the reacting substrate are predicted.
Predicted residues that have not been previously tested experimentally
were investigated by site-directed mutagenesis and kinetic analysis.
In human PGI, single-point mutations of the predicted second- and
third-shell residues K362, H100, E495, D511, H396, and Q388 show significant
decreases in catalytic activity relative to that of the wild type.
The results of these experiments demonstrate that, as predicted, remote
residues are very important in PGI catalysis but make only small contributions
to catalysis in KSI