J. Biol. Chem.

Abstract

Tryptophan synthase is a bifunctional alpha(2)/beta(2) complex catalyzing the last two steps of L-tryptophan biosynthesis. The natural substrates of the alpha-subunit indole-3- glycerolphosphate and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, and the substrate analogs indole-3-propanolphosphate and DL-alpha- glycerol-3-phosphate are allosteric effectors of the beta- subunit activity. It has been shown recently, that the indole- 3-acetyl amino acids indole-3-acetylglycine and indole-3- acetyl-L-aspartic acid are both alpha-subunit inhibitors and beta-subunit allosteric effectors, whereas indole-3-acetyl-L- valine is only an alpha-subunit inhibitor (Marabotti, A., Cozzini, P., and Mozzarelli, A. (2000) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1476, 287-299). The crystal structures of tryptophan synthase complexed with indole-3-acetylglycine and indole-3-acetyl-L- aspartic acid show that both ligands bind to the active site such that the carboxylate moiety is positioned similarly as the phosphate group of the natural substrates. As a consequence, the residues of the alpha-active site that interact with the ligands are the same as observed in the indole 3- glycerolphosphate-enzyme complex. Ligand binding leads to closure of loop alphaL6 of the alpha-subunit, a key structural element of intersubunit communication. This is in keeping with the allosteric role played by these compounds. The structure of the enzyme complex with indole-3-acetyl-L-valine is quite different. Due to the hydrophobic lateral chain, this molecule adopts a new orientation in the alpha-active site. In this case, closure of loop alphaL6 is no longer observed, in agreement with its functioning only as an inhibitor of the a- subunit reaction

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions