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Control Activity of Yeast Geranylgeranyl Diphosphate Synthase from Dimer Interface through H‑Bonds and Hydrophobic Interaction
Previously we showed that
yeast geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGPPS) becomes an inactive
monomer when the first N-terminal helix involved in dimerization is
deleted. This raises questions regarding why dimerization is required
for GGPPS activity and which amino acids in the dimer interface are
essential for dimerization-mediated activity. According to the GGPPS
crystal structure, three amino acids (N101, N104, and Y105) located
in the helix F of one subunit are near the active site of the other
subunit. As presented here, when these residues were replaced individually
with Ala caused insignificant activity changes, N101A/Y105A and N101A/N104A
but not N104A/Y105A showed remarkably decreased <i>k</i><sub>cat</sub> values (200–250-fold). The triple mutant N101A/N104A/Y105A
displayed no detectable activity, although dimer was retained in these
mutants. Because N101 and Y105 form H-bonds with H139 and R140 in
the other subunit, respectively, we generated H139A/R140A double mutant
and found it was inactive and became monomeric. Therefore, the multiple
mutations apparently influence the integrity of the catalytic site
due to the missing H-bonding network. Moreover, Met111, also on the
highly conserved helix F, was necessary for dimer formation and enzyme
activity. When Met111 was replaced with Glu, the negative-charged
repulsion converted half of the dimer into a monomer. In conclusion,
the H-bonds mainly through N101 for maintaining substrate binding
stability and the hydrophobic interaction of M111 in dimer interface
are essential for activity of yeast GGPPS