Conformational Flexibility
in the Allosteric Regulation of Human UDP-α-d-Glucose
6-Dehydrogenase
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Abstract
UDP-α-d-xylose (UDX) acts as a feedback
inhibitor of human UDP-α-d-glucose 6-dehydrogenase
(hUGDH) by activating an unusual allosteric switch, the Thr131 loop.
UDX binding induces the Thr131 loop to translate ∼5 Å
through the protein core, changing packing interactions and rotating
a helix (α6<sub>136–144</sub>) to favor the formation
of an inactive hexameric complex. But how does to conformational change occur given the steric packing constraints of the protein core?
To answer this question, we deleted Val132 from the Thr131 loop to approximate an intermediate state in the allosteric transition.
The 2.3 Å resolution crystal structure of the deletion construct
(Δ132) reveals an open conformation that relaxes steric constraints
and facilitates repacking of the protein core. Sedimentation velocity
studies show that the open conformation stabilizes the Δ132
construct as a hexamer with point group symmetry 32, similar to that
of the active complex. In contrast, the UDX-inhibited enzyme forms
a lower-symmetry, horseshoe-shaped hexameric complex. We show that
the Δ132 and UDX-inhibited structures have similar hexamer-building
interfaces, suggesting that the hinge-bending motion represents a
path for the allosteric transition between the different hexameric
states. On the basis of (i) main chain flexibility and (ii) a model
of the conformational change, we propose that hinge bending can occur
as a concerted motion between adjacent subunits in the high-symmetry
hexamer. We combine these results in a structurally detailed model
for allosteric feedback inhibition and substrate–product exchange
during the catalytic cycle