Single Enzyme Studies
Reveal the Existence of Discrete
Functional States for Monomeric Enzymes and How They Are “Selected”
upon Allosteric Regulation
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Abstract
Allosteric regulation of enzymatic activity forms the
basis for
controlling a plethora of vital cellular processes. While the mechanism
underlying regulation of multimeric enzymes is generally well understood
and proposed to primarily operate via conformational selection, the
mechanism underlying allosteric regulation of monomeric enzymes is
poorly understood. Here we monitored for the first time allosteric
regulation of enzymatic activity at the single molecule level. We
measured single stochastic catalytic turnovers of a monomeric metabolic
enzyme (<i>Thermomyces lanuginosus Lipase</i>) while titrating
its proximity to a lipid membrane that acts as an allosteric effector.
The single molecule measurements revealed the existence of discrete
binary functional states that could not be identified in macroscopic
measurements due to ensemble averaging. The discrete functional states
correlate with the enzyme’s major conformational states and
are redistributed in the presence of the regulatory effector. Thus,
our data support allosteric regulation of monomeric enzymes to operate
via selection of preexisting functional states and not via induction
of new ones