4 research outputs found

    Kinetic Mechanism of Indole-3-glycerol Phosphate Synthase

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    The (βα)<sub>8</sub>-barrel enzyme indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase (IGPS) catalyzes the multistep transformation of 1-(<i>o</i>-carboxyphenylamino)-1-deoxyribulose 5-phosphate (CdRP) into indole-3-glycerol phosphate (IGP) in tryptophan biosynthesis. Mutagenesis data and crystal structure analysis of IGPS from <i>Sulfolobus solfataricus</i> (sIGPS) allowed for the formulation of a plausible chemical mechanism of the reaction, and molecular dynamics simulations suggested that flexibility of active site loops might be important for catalysis. Here we developed a method that uses extrinsic fluorophores attached to active site loops to connect the kinetic mechanism of sIGPS to structure and conformational motions. Specifically, we elucidated the kinetic mechanism of sIGPS and correlated individual steps in the mechanism to conformational motions of flexible loops. Pre-steady-state kinetic measurements of CdRP to IGP conversion monitoring changes in intrinsic tryptophan and IGP fluorescence provided a minimal three-step kinetic model in which fast substrate binding and chemical transformation are followed by slow product release. The role of sIGPS loop conformational motion during substrate binding and catalysis was examined via variants that were covalently labeled with fluorescent dyes at the N-terminal extension of the enzyme and mobile active site loop β1α1. Analysis of kinetic data monitoring dye fluorescence revealed a conformational change that follows substrate binding, suggesting an induced-fit-type binding mechanism for the substrate CdRP. Global fitting of all kinetic results obtained with wild-type sIGPS and the labeled variants was best accommodated by a four-step kinetic model. In this model, both the binding of CdRP and its on-enzyme conversion to IGP are accompanied by conformational transitions. The liberation of the product from the active site is the rate-limiting step of the overall reaction. Our results confirm the importance of flexible active loops for substrate binding and catalysis by sIGPS

    Relationship of Catalysis and Active Site Loop Dynamics in the (βα)<sub>8</sub>‑Barrel Enzyme Indole-3-glycerol Phosphate Synthase

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    It is important to understand how the catalytic activity of enzymes is related to their conformational flexibility. We have studied this activity–flexibility correlation using the example of indole-3-glycerol phosphate synthase from <i>Sulfolobus solfataricus</i> (ssIGPS), which catalyzes the fifth step in the biosynthesis of tryptophan. ssIGPS is a thermostable representative of enzymes with the frequently encountered and catalytically versatile (βα)<sub>8</sub>-barrel fold. Four variants of ssIGPS with increased catalytic turnover numbers were analyzed by transient kinetics at 25 °C, and wild-type ssIGPS was likewise analyzed both at 25 °C and at 60 °C. Global fitting with a minimal three-step model provided the individual rate constants for substrate binding, chemical transformation, and product release. The results showed that in both cases, namely, the application of activating mutations and temperature increase, the net increase in the catalytic turnover number is afforded by acceleration of the product release rate relative to the chemical transformation steps. Measurements of the solvent viscosity effect at 25 °C versus 60 °C confirmed this change in the rate-determining step with temperature, which is in accordance with a kink in the Arrhenius diagram of ssIGPS at ∼40 °C. When rotational diffusion rates of electron paramagnetic spin-labels attached to active site loop β1α1 are plotted in the form of an Arrhenius diagram, kinks are observed at the same temperature. These findings, together with molecular dynamics simulations, demonstrate that a different degree of loop mobility correlates with different rate-limiting steps in the catalytic mechanism of ssIGPS

    Evidence for the Existence of Elaborate Enzyme Complexes in the Paleoarchean Era

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    Due to the lack of macromolecular fossils, the enzymatic repertoire of extinct species has remained largely unknown to date. In an attempt to solve this problem, we have characterized a cyclase subunit (HisF) of the imidazole glycerol phosphate synthase (ImGP-S), which was reconstructed from the era of the last universal common ancestor of cellular organisms (LUCA). As observed for contemporary HisF proteins, the crystal structure of LUCA-HisF adopts the (βα)<sub>8</sub>-barrel architecture, one of the most ancient folds. Moreover, LUCA-HisF (i) resembles extant HisF proteins with regard to internal 2-fold symmetry, active site residues, and a stabilizing salt bridge cluster, (ii) is thermostable and shows a folding mechanism similar to that of contemporary (βα)<sub>8</sub>-barrel enzymes, (iii) displays high catalytic activity, and (iv) forms a stable and functional complex with the glutaminase subunit (HisH) of an extant ImGP-S. Furthermore, we show that LUCA-HisF binds to a reconstructed LUCA-HisH protein with high affinity. Our findings suggest that the evolution of highly efficient enzymes and enzyme complexes has already been completed in the LUCA era, which means that sophisticated catalytic concepts such as substrate channeling and allosteric communication existed already 3.5 billion years ago

    Molecular Engineering of Organophosphate Hydrolysis Activity from a Weak Promiscuous Lactonase Template

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    Rapid evolution of enzymes provides unique molecular insights into the remarkable adaptability of proteins and helps to elucidate the relationship between amino acid sequence, structure, and function. We interrogated the evolution of the phospho­triesterase from Pseudomonas diminuta (<i>Pd</i>PTE), which hydrolyzes synthetic organophosphates with remarkable catalytic efficiency. PTE is thought to be an evolutionarily “young” enzyme, and it has been postulated that it has evolved from members of the phospho­triesterase-like lactonase (PLL) family that show promiscuous organophosphate-degrading activity. Starting from a weakly promiscuous PLL scaffold (<i>Dr</i>0930 from Deinococcus radiodurans), we designed an extremely efficient organophosphate hydrolase (OPH) with broad substrate specificity using rational and random mutagenesis in combination with in vitro activity screening. The OPH activity for seven organophosphate substrates was simultaneously enhanced by up to 5 orders of magnitude, achieving absolute values of catalytic efficiencies up to 10<sup>6</sup> M<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>. Structural and computational analyses identified the molecular basis for the enhanced OPH activity of the engineered PLL variants and demonstrated that OPH catalysis in <i>Pd</i>PTE and the engineered PLL differ significantly in the mode of substrate binding
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