Energetic Coupling between Ligand Binding and Dimerization
in <i>Escherichia coli</i> Phosphoglycerate Mutase
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
Energetic
coupling of two molecular events in a protein molecule
is ubiquitous in biochemical reactions mediated by proteins, such
as catalysis and signal transduction. Here, we investigate energetic
coupling between ligand binding and folding of a dimer using a model
system that shows three-state equilibrium unfolding of an exceptional
quality. The homodimeric <i>Escherichia coli</i> cofactor-dependent
phosphoglycerate mutase (dPGM) was found to be stabilized by ATP in
a proteome-wide screen, although dPGM does not require or utilize
ATP for enzymatic function. We investigated the effect of ATP on the
thermodynamic stability of dPGM using equilibrium unfolding. We found
that, in the absence of ATP, dPGM populates a partially unfolded,
monomeric intermediate during equilibrium unfolding. However, addition
of 1.0 mM ATP drastically reduces the population of the intermediate
by selectively stabilizing the native dimer. Using a computational
ligand docking method, we predicted ATP binds to the active site of
the enzyme using the triphosphate group. By performing equilibrium
unfolding and isothermal titration calorimetry with active-site variants
of dPGM, we confirmed that active-site residues are involved in ATP
binding. Our findings show that ATP promotes dimerization of the protein
by binding to the active site, which is distal from the dimer interface.
This cooperativity suggests an energetic coupling between the active
site and the dimer interface. We also propose a structural link to
explain how ligand binding to the active site is energetically coupled
with dimerization