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1.
J Biol Chem ; 294(26): 10131-10145, 2019 06 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31076506

RESUMEN

Dysfunction of human phenylalanine hydroxylase (hPAH, EC 1.14.16.1) is the primary cause of phenylketonuria, the most common inborn error of amino acid metabolism. The dynamic domain rearrangements of this multimeric protein have thwarted structural study of the full-length form for decades, until now. In this study, a tractable C29S variant of hPAH (C29S) yielded a 3.06 Å resolution crystal structure of the tetrameric resting-state conformation. We used size-exclusion chromatography in line with small-angle X-ray scattering (SEC-SAXS) to analyze the full-length hPAH solution structure both in the presence and absence of Phe, which serves as both substrate and allosteric activators. Allosteric Phe binding favors accumulation of an activated PAH tetramer conformation, which is biophysically distinct in solution. Protein characterization with enzyme kinetics and intrinsic fluorescence revealed that the C29S variant and hPAH are otherwise equivalent in their response to Phe, further supported by their behavior on various chromatography resins and by analytical ultracentrifugation. Modeling of resting-state and activated forms of C29S against SAXS data with available structural data created and evaluated several new models for the transition between the architecturally distinct conformations of PAH and highlighted unique intra- and inter-subunit interactions. Three best-fitting alternative models all placed the allosteric Phe-binding module 8-10 Å farther from the tetramer center than do all previous models. The structural insights into allosteric activation of hPAH reported here may help inform ongoing efforts to treat phenylketonuria with novel therapeutic approaches.


Asunto(s)
Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/química , Fenilalanina/metabolismo , Multimerización de Proteína , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Regulación Alostérica , Biofisica , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Fenilalanina/química , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/metabolismo , Unión Proteica
2.
J Biol Chem ; 293(51): 19532-19543, 2018 12 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30287685

RESUMEN

Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) regulates phenylalanine (Phe) levels in mammals to prevent neurotoxicity resulting from high Phe concentrations as observed in genetic disorders leading to hyperphenylalaninemia and phenylketonuria. PAH senses elevated Phe concentrations by transient allosteric Phe binding to a protein-protein interface between ACT domains of different subunits in a PAH tetramer. This interface is present in an activated PAH (A-PAH) tetramer and absent in a resting-state PAH (RS-PAH) tetramer. To investigate this allosteric sensing mechanism, here we used the GROMACS molecular dynamics simulation suite on the Folding@home computing platform to perform extensive molecular simulations and Markov state model (MSM) analysis of Phe binding to ACT domain dimers. These simulations strongly implicated a conformational selection mechanism for Phe association with ACT domain dimers and revealed protein motions that act as a gating mechanism for Phe binding. The MSMs also illuminate a highly mobile hairpin loop, consistent with experimental findings also presented here that the PAH variant L72W does not shift the PAH structural equilibrium toward the activated state. Finally, simulations of ACT domain monomers are presented, in which spontaneous transitions between resting-state and activated conformations are observed, also consistent with a mechanism of conformational selection. These mechanistic details provide detailed insight into the regulation of PAH activation and provide testable hypotheses for the development of new allosteric effectors to correct structural and functional defects in PAH.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Moleculares , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/química , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/metabolismo , Fenilalanina/metabolismo , Sustitución de Aminoácidos , Sitios de Unión , Humanos , Mutación , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/genética , Unión Proteica , Dominios Proteicos , Multimerización de Proteína , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(9): 2394-9, 2016 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26884182

RESUMEN

Improved understanding of the relationship among structure, dynamics, and function for the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) can lead to needed new therapies for phenylketonuria, the most common inborn error of amino acid metabolism. PAH is a multidomain homo-multimeric protein whose conformation and multimerization properties respond to allosteric activation by the substrate phenylalanine (Phe); the allosteric regulation is necessary to maintain Phe below neurotoxic levels. A recently introduced model for allosteric regulation of PAH involves major domain motions and architecturally distinct PAH tetramers [Jaffe EK, Stith L, Lawrence SH, Andrake M, Dunbrack RL, Jr (2013) Arch Biochem Biophys 530(2):73-82]. Herein, we present, to our knowledge, the first X-ray crystal structure for a full-length mammalian (rat) PAH in an autoinhibited conformation. Chromatographic isolation of a monodisperse tetrameric PAH, in the absence of Phe, facilitated determination of the 2.9 Å crystal structure. The structure of full-length PAH supersedes a composite homology model that had been used extensively to rationalize phenylketonuria genotype-phenotype relationships. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) confirms that this tetramer, which dominates in the absence of Phe, is different from a Phe-stabilized allosterically activated PAH tetramer. The lack of structural detail for activated PAH remains a barrier to complete understanding of phenylketonuria genotype-phenotype relationships. Nevertheless, the use of SAXS and X-ray crystallography together to inspect PAH structure provides, to our knowledge, the first complete view of the enzyme in a tetrameric form that was not possible with prior partial crystal structures, and facilitates interpretation of a wealth of biochemical and structural data that was hitherto impossible to evaluate.


Asunto(s)
Biopolímeros/química , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/química , Animales , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Modelos Moleculares , Conformación Proteica , Ratas
4.
Mol Genet Metab ; 121(4): 289-296, 2017 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28645531

RESUMEN

Phenylketonuria (PKU) and less severe hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) constitute the most common inborn error of amino acid metabolism, and is most often caused by defects in phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) function resulting in accumulation of Phe to neurotoxic levels. Despite the success of dietary intervention in preventing permanent neurological damage, individuals living with PKU clamor for additional non-dietary therapies. The bulk of disease-associated mutations are PAH missense variants, which occur throughout the entire 452 amino acid human PAH protein. While some disease-associated mutations affect protein structure (e.g. truncations) and others encode catalytically dead variants, most have been viewed as defective in protein folding/stability. Here we refine this view to address how PKU-associated missense variants can perturb the equilibrium among alternate native PAH structures (resting-state PAH and activated PAH), thus shifting the tipping point of this equilibrium to a neurotoxic Phe concentration. This refined view of PKU introduces opportunities for the design or discovery of therapeutic pharmacological chaperones that can help restore the tipping point to healthy Phe levels and how such a therapeutic might work with or without the inhibitory pharmacological chaperone BH4. Dysregulation of an equilibrium of architecturally distinct native PAH structures departs from the concept of "misfolding", provides an updated understanding of PKU, and presents an enhanced foundation for understanding genotype/phenotype relationships.


Asunto(s)
Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/química , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/genética , Fenilcetonurias/genética , Fenilcetonurias/metabolismo , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Regulación Alostérica , Biopterinas/análogos & derivados , Biopterinas/uso terapéutico , Genotipo , Humanos , Mutación , Mutación Missense , Fenilalanina/metabolismo , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/metabolismo , Fenilcetonurias/tratamiento farmacológico , Pliegue de Proteína
5.
Acc Chem Res ; 49(11): 2509-2517, 2016 11 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27783504

RESUMEN

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS), also known as 5-aminolevulinate dehydratase, is an essential enzyme in the biosynthesis of all tetrapyrroles, which function in respiration, photosynthesis, and methanogenesis. Throughout evolution, PBGS adapted to a diversity of cellular niches and evolved to use an unusual variety of metal ions both for catalytic function and to control protein multimerization. With regard to the active site, some PBGSs require Zn2+; a subset of those, including human PBGS, contain a constellation of cysteine residues that acts as a sink for the environmental toxin Pb2+. PBGSs that do not require the soft metal ion Zn2+ at the active site instead are suspected of using the hard metal Mg2+. The most unexpected property of the PBGS family of enzymes is a dissociative allosteric mechanism that utilizes an equilibrium of architecturally and functionally distinct protein assemblies. The high-activity assembly is an octamer in which intersubunit interactions modulate active-site lid motion. This octamer can dissociate to dimer, the dimer can undergo a hinge twist, and the twisted dimer can assemble to a low-activity hexamer. The hexamer does not have the intersubunit interactions required to stabilize a closed conformation of the active site lid. PBGS active site chemistry benefits from a closed lid because porphobilinogen biosynthesis includes Schiff base formation, which requires deprotonated lysine amino groups. N-terminal and C-terminal sequence extensions dictate whether a specific species of PBGS can sample the hexameric assembly. The bulk of species (nearly all except animals and yeasts) use Mg2+ as an allosteric activator. Mg2+ functions allosterically by binding to an intersubunit interface that is present in the octamer but absent in the hexamer. This conformational selection allosteric mechanism is purported to be essential to avoid the untimely accumulation of phototoxic chlorophyll precursors in plants. For those PBGSs that do not use the allosteric Mg2+, there is a spatially equivalent arginine-derived guanidium group. Deprotonation of this residue promotes formation of the hexamer and accounts for the basic arm of the bell-shaped pH vs activity profile of human PBGS. A human inborn error of metabolism known as ALAD porphyria is attributed to PBGS variants that favor the hexameric assembly. The existence of one such variant, F12L, which dramatically stabilizes the human PBGS hexamer, allowed crystal structure determination for the hexamer. Without this crystal structure and octameric PBGS structures containing the allosteric Mg2+, it would have been difficult to decipher the structural basis for PBGS allostery. The requirement for multimer dissociation as an intermediate step in PBGS allostery was established by monitoring subunit disproportionation during the turnover-dependent transition of heteromeric PBGS (comprised of human wild type and F12L) from hexamer to octamer. One outcome of these studies was the definition of the dissociative morpheein model of protein allostery. The phylogenetically variable time scales for PBGS multimer interconversion result in atypical kinetic and biophysical behaviors. These behaviors can serve to identify other proteins that use the morpheein model of protein allostery.


Asunto(s)
Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Bacterias , Dominio Catalítico , Humanos , Cinética , Lisina/química , Plantas , Isoformas de Proteínas , Multimerización de Proteína , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína
6.
BMC Cancer ; 15: 436, 2015 May 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26016476

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Overexpression or mutation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) potently enhances the growth of many solid tumors. Tumor cells frequently display resistance to mechanistically-distinct EGFR-directed therapeutic agents, making it valuable to develop therapeutics that work by additional mechanisms. Current EGFR-targeting therapeutics include antibodies targeting the extracellular domains, and small molecules inhibiting the intracellular kinase domain. Recent studies have identified a novel prone extracellular tetrameric EGFR configuration, which we identify as a potential target for drug discovery. METHODS: Our focus is on the prone EGFR tetramer, which contains a novel protein-protein interface involving extracellular domain III. This EGFR tetramer is computationally targeted for stabilization by small molecule ligand binding. This study performed virtual screening of a Life Chemicals, Inc. small molecule library of 345,232 drug-like compounds against a molecular dynamics simulation of protein-protein interfaces distinct to the novel tetramer. One hundred nine chemically diverse candidate molecules were selected and evaluated using a cell-based high-content imaging screen that directly assessed induced internalization of the EGFR effector protein Grb2. Positive hits were further evaluated for influence on phosphorylation of EGFR and its effector ERK1/2. RESULTS: Fourteen hit compounds affected internalization of Grb2, an adaptor responsive to EGFR activation. Most hits had limited effect on cell viability, and minimally influenced EGFR and ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Docked hit compound poses generally include Arg270 or neighboring residues, which are also involved in binding the effective therapeutic cetuximab, guiding further chemical optimization. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that the EGFR tetrameric configuration offers a novel cancer drug target.


Asunto(s)
Carcinoma de Células Escamosas/tratamiento farmacológico , Receptores ErbB/antagonistas & inhibidores , Receptores ErbB/química , Proteína Adaptadora GRB2/metabolismo , Neoplasias de Cabeza y Cuello/tratamiento farmacológico , Inhibidores de Proteínas Quinasas/farmacología , Transporte de Proteínas/efectos de los fármacos , Línea Celular Tumoral , Supervivencia Celular/efectos de los fármacos , Cetuximab/farmacología , Evaluación Preclínica de Medicamentos , Receptores ErbB/metabolismo , Clorhidrato de Erlotinib/farmacología , Humanos , Proteína Quinasa 1 Activada por Mitógenos/metabolismo , Proteína Quinasa 3 Activada por Mitógenos/metabolismo , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Fosforilación/efectos de los fármacos , Dominios y Motivos de Interacción de Proteínas , Transducción de Señal
7.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 530(2): 73-82, 2013 Feb 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23296088

RESUMEN

The structural basis for allosteric regulation of phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH), whose dysfunction causes phenylketonuria (PKU), is poorly understood. A new morpheein model for PAH allostery is proposed to consist of a dissociative equilibrium between two architecturally different tetramers whose interconversion requires a ∼90° rotation between the PAH catalytic and regulatory domains, the latter of which contains an ACT domain. This unprecedented model is supported by in vitro data on purified full length rat and human PAH. The conformational change is both predicted to and shown to render the tetramers chromatographically separable using ion exchange methods. One novel aspect of the activated tetramer model is an allosteric phenylalanine binding site at the intersubunit interface of ACT domains. Amino acid ligand-stabilized ACT domain dimerization follows the multimerization and ligand binding behavior of ACT domains present in other proteins in the PDB. Spectroscopic, chromatographic, and electrophoretic methods demonstrate a PAH equilibrium consisting of two architecturally distinct tetramers as well as dimers. We postulate that PKU-associated mutations may shift the PAH quaternary structure equilibrium in favor of the low activity assemblies. Pharmacological chaperones that stabilize the ACT:ACT interface can potentially provide PKU patients with a novel small molecule therapeutic.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Químicos , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/química , Multimerización de Proteína , Regulación Alostérica/fisiología , Animales , Humanos , Chaperonas Moleculares , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/metabolismo , Fenilcetonurias/enzimología , Fenilcetonurias/terapia , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Ratas
8.
J Biol Chem ; 286(17): 15298-307, 2011 Apr 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21383008

RESUMEN

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) is essential for heme biosynthesis, but the enzyme of the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii (TgPBGS) differs from that of its human host in several important respects, including subcellular localization, metal ion dependence, and quaternary structural dynamics. We have solved the crystal structure of TgPBGS, which contains an octamer in the crystallographic asymmetric unit. Crystallized in the presence of substrate, each active site contains one molecule of the product porphobilinogen. Unlike prior structures containing a substrate-derived heterocycle directly bound to an active site zinc ion, the product-bound TgPBGS active site contains neither zinc nor magnesium, placing in question the common notion that all PBGS enzymes require an active site metal ion. Unlike human PBGS, the TgPBGS octamer contains magnesium ions at the intersections between pro-octamer dimers, which are presumed to function in allosteric regulation. TgPBGS includes N- and C-terminal regions that differ considerably from previously solved crystal structures. In particular, the C-terminal extension found in all apicomplexan PBGS enzymes forms an intersubunit ß-sheet, stabilizing a pro-octamer dimer and preventing formation of hexamers that can form in human PBGS. The TgPBGS structure suggests strategies for the development of parasite-selective PBGS inhibitors.


Asunto(s)
Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Porfobilinógeno/química , Toxoplasma/enzimología , Dominio Catalítico , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Humanos , Magnesio , Modelos Moleculares , Porfobilinógeno/metabolismo , Unión Proteica , Multimerización de Proteína , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína
9.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 519(2): 131-43, 2012 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22182754

RESUMEN

Homo-oligomeric protein assemblies are known to participate in dynamic association/disassociation equilibria under native conditions, thus creating an equilibrium of assembly states. Such quaternary structure equilibria may be influenced in a physiologically significant manner either by covalent modification or by the non-covalent binding of ligands. This review follows the evolution of ideas about homo-oligomeric equilibria through the 20th and into the 21st centuries and the relationship of these equilibria to allosteric regulation by the non-covalent binding of ligands. A dynamic quaternary structure equilibria is described where the dissociated state can have alternate conformations that cannot reassociate to the original multimer; the alternate conformations dictate assembly to functionally distinct alternate multimers of finite stoichiometry. The functional distinction between different assemblies provides a mechanism for allostery. The requirement for dissociation distinguishes this morpheein model of allosteric regulation from the classical MWC concerted and KNF sequential models. These models are described alongside earlier dissociating allosteric models. The identification of proteins that exist as an equilibrium of diverse native quaternary structure assemblies has the potential to define new targets for allosteric modulation with significant consequences for further understanding and/or controlling protein structure and function. Thus, a rationale for identifying proteins that may use the morpheein model of allostery is presented and a selection of proteins for which published data suggests this mechanism may be operative are listed.


Asunto(s)
Multimerización de Proteína , Proteínas/química , Proteínas/metabolismo , Regulación Alostérica , Animales , Humanos , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína
10.
Arch Biochem Biophys ; 519(2): 144-53, 2012 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22037356

RESUMEN

The structural basis for allosteric regulation of porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) is modulation of a quaternary structure equilibrium between octamer and hexamer (via dimers), which is represented schematically as 8mer ⇔ 2mer ⇔ 2mer∗⇔ 6mer∗. The "∗" represents a reorientation between two domains of each subunit that occurs in the dissociated state because it is sterically forbidden in the larger multimers. Allosteric effectors of PBGS are both intrinsic and extrinsic and are phylogenetically variable. In some species this equilibrium is modulated intrinsically by magnesium which binds at a site specific to the 8mer. In other species this equilibrium is modulated intrinsically by pH with the guanidinium group of an arginine being spatially equivalent to the allosteric magnesium ion. In humans, disease associated variants all shift the equilibrium toward the 6mer∗ relative to wild type. The 6mer∗ has a surface cavity that is not present in the 8mer and is proposed as a small molecule allosteric binding site. In silico and in vitro approaches have revealed species-specific allosteric PBGS inhibitors that stabilize the 6mer∗. Some of these inhibitors are drugs in clinical use leading to the hypothesis that extrinsic allosteric inhibition of human PBGS could be a mechanism for drug side effects.


Asunto(s)
Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Multimerización de Proteína , Regulación Alostérica/efectos de los fármacos , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Estabilidad de Enzimas/efectos de los fármacos , Humanos , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Multimerización de Proteína/efectos de los fármacos , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína
11.
Tetrahedron Lett ; 53(25): 3144-3146, 2012 Jun 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22822274

RESUMEN

3-Chloro-4-(dichloromethyl)-5-hydroxy-5H-furan-2-one (Mutagen X, MX) was synthesized in six steps from commercially-available and inexpensive starting materials (27% overall yield). This synthesis enables the preparation of MX analogs and does not require the use of chlorine gas, as do previously reported methods.

12.
J Biol Chem ; 285(29): 22122-31, 2010 Jul 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20442414

RESUMEN

Apicomplexan parasites (including Plasmodium spp. and Toxoplasma gondii) employ a four-carbon pathway for de novo heme biosynthesis, but this pathway is distinct from the animal/fungal C4 pathway in that it is distributed between three compartments: the mitochondrion, cytosol, and apicoplast, a plastid acquired by secondary endosymbiosis of an alga. Parasite porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) resides within the apicoplast, and phylogenetic analysis indicates a plant origin. The PBGS family exhibits a complex use of metal ions (Zn(2+) and Mg(2+)) and oligomeric states (dimers, hexamers, and octamers). Recombinant T. gondii PBGS (TgPBGS) was purified as a stable approximately 320-kDa octamer, and low levels of dimers but no hexamers were also observed. The enzyme displays a broad activity peak (pH 7-8.5), with a K(m) for aminolevulinic acid of approximately 150 microM and specific activity of approximately 24 micromol of porphobilinogen/mg of protein/h. Like the plant enzyme, TgPBGS responds to Mg(2+) but not Zn(2+) and shows two Mg(2+) affinities, interpreted as tight binding at both the active and allosteric sites. Unlike other Mg(2+)-binding PBGS, however, metal ions are not required for TgPBGS octamer stability. A mutant enzyme lacking the C-terminal 13 amino acids distinguishing parasite PBGS from plant and animal enzymes purified as a dimer, suggesting that the C terminus is required for octamer stability. Parasite heme biosynthesis is inhibited (and parasites are killed) by succinylacetone, an active site-directed suicide substrate. The distinct phylogenetic, enzymatic, and structural features of apicomplexan PBGS offer scope for developing selective inhibitors of the parasite enzyme based on its quaternary structure characteristics.


Asunto(s)
Antiprotozoarios/farmacología , Plastidios/enzimología , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Proteínas Protozoarias/metabolismo , Toxoplasma/efectos de los fármacos , Toxoplasma/enzimología , Animales , Dominio Catalítico , Clonación Molecular , Regulación Enzimológica de la Expresión Génica/efectos de los fármacos , Genoma/genética , Hemo/biosíntesis , Heptanoatos/farmacología , Humanos , Iones , Cinética , Metales/farmacología , Ratones , Plastidios/efectos de los fármacos , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/antagonistas & inhibidores , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/genética , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Transporte de Proteínas/efectos de los fármacos , Proteínas Protozoarias/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/aislamiento & purificación , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Fracciones Subcelulares/efectos de los fármacos , Fracciones Subcelulares/enzimología
13.
Biochimie ; 183: 63-77, 2021 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33221376

RESUMEN

Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is an allosteric enzyme that maintains phenylalanine (Phe) below neurotoxic levels; its failure results in phenylketonuria, an inborn error of amino acid metabolism. Wild type (WT) PAH equilibrates among resting-state (RS-PAH) and activated (A-PAH) conformations, whose equilibrium position depends upon allosteric Phe binding. The RS-PAH conformation of WT rat PAH (rPAH) contains a cation-π sandwich involving Phe80 that cannot exist in the A-PAH conformation. Phe80 variants F80A, F80D, F80L, and F80R were prepared and evaluated using native PAGE, size exclusion chromatography, ion exchange behavior, intrinsic protein fluorescence, enzyme kinetics, and limited proteolysis, each as a function of [Phe]. Like WT rPAH, F80A and F80D show allosteric activation by Phe while F80L and F80R are constitutively active. Maximal activity of all variants suggests relief of a rate-determining conformational change. Limited proteolysis of WT rPAH (minus Phe) reveals facile cleavage within a 4-helix bundle that is buried in the RS-PAH tetramer interface, reflecting dynamic dissociation of that tetramer. This cleavage is not seen for the Phe80 variants, which all show proteolytic hypersensitivity in a linker that repositions during the RS-PAH to A-PAH interchange. Hypersensitivity is corrected by addition of Phe such that all variants become like WT rPAH and achieve the A-PAH conformation. Thus, manipulation of Phe80 perturbs the conformational space sampled by PAH, increasing sampling of on-pathway intermediates in the RS-PAH and A-PAH interchange. The behavior of the Phe80 variants mimics that of disease-associated R68S and suggests a molecular basis for proteolytic susceptibility in PKU-associated human PAH variants.


Asunto(s)
Mutación Missense , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/química , Multimerización de Proteína , Sustitución de Aminoácidos , Animales , Estabilidad de Enzimas , Humanos , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/genética , Fenilalanina Hidroxilasa/metabolismo , Fenilcetonurias/enzimología , Fenilcetonurias/genética , Conformación Proteica en Hélice alfa , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Ratas
14.
J Biol Chem ; 284(51): 35807-17, 2009 Dec 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19812033

RESUMEN

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) catalyzes the first common step in tetrapyrrole (e.g. heme, chlorophyll) biosynthesis. Human PBGS exists as an equilibrium of high activity octamers, low activity hexamers, and alternate dimer configurations that dictate the stoichiometry and architecture of further assembly. It is posited that small molecules can be found that inhibit human PBGS activity by stabilizing the hexamer. Such molecules, if present in the environment, could potentiate disease states associated with reduced PBGS activity, such as lead poisoning and ALAD porphyria, the latter of which is associated with human PBGS variants whose quaternary structure equilibrium is shifted toward the hexamer (Jaffe, E. K., and Stith, L. (2007) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 80, 329-337). Hexamer-stabilizing inhibitors of human PBGS were identified using in silico prescreening (docking) of approximately 111,000 structures to a hexamer-specific surface cavity of a human PBGS crystal structure. Seventy-seven compounds were evaluated in vitro; three provided 90-100% conversion of octamer to hexamer in a native PAGE mobility shift assay. Based on chemical purity, two (ML-3A9 and ML-3H2) were subjected to further evaluation of their effect on the quaternary structure equilibrium and enzymatic activity. Naturally occurring ALAD porphyria-associated human PBGS variants are shown to have an increased susceptibility to inhibition by both ML-3A9 and ML-3H2. ML-3H2 is a structural analog of amebicidal drugs, which have porphyria-like side effects. Data support the hypothesis that human PBGS hexamer stabilization may explain these side effects. The current work identifies allosteric ligands of human PBGS and, thus, identifies human PBGS as a medically relevant allosteric enzyme.


Asunto(s)
Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Regulación Alostérica/fisiología , Humanos , Intoxicación por Plomo/enzimología , Ligandos , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Porfirias/enzimología , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína/fisiología
15.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 680: 481-8, 2010.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20865533

RESUMEN

The inactive porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) hexamer has an oligomer-specific and phylogenetically variable surface cavity that is not present in the active octamer. The octamer and hexamer are components of a dynamic quaternary structure equilibrium characteristic of morpheeins. Small molecules that bind to the hexamer-specific surface cavity, which is at the interface of three subunits, are predicted to act as allosteric inhibitors that function by drawing the oligomeric equilibrium toward the hexamer. We used GLIDE as a tool to enrich a 250,000 molecule library for molecules with enhanced probability of acting as hexamer-stabilizing allosteric inhibitors of PBGS from Yersinia enterocolitica. Eighty-six compounds were tested in vitro and five showed hexamer stabilization. We discuss the application of computational docking to surface cavities as an approach to find allosteric modulators of protein function with specific reference to morpheeins that function as an equilibrium of non-additive quaternary structure assemblies.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas/química , Sitio Alostérico , Biología Computacional , Descubrimiento de Drogas , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/química , Inhibidores Enzimáticos/farmacología , Estabilidad de Enzimas/efectos de los fármacos , Modelos Moleculares , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/antagonistas & inhibidores , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Subunidades de Proteína , Proteínas/metabolismo , Yersinia enterocolitica/enzimología
16.
Trends Biochem Sci ; 30(9): 490-7, 2005 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16023348

RESUMEN

Classic models for the allosteric regulation of protein function consider an equilibrium among protein structures of constant oligomeric multiplicity. The morpheein (mor-phee'-in) concept expands this model to include a dynamic equilibrium of protein structures wherein a protein monomer can exist in more than one conformation and each monomer conformation dictates a different quaternary structure of finite multiplicity and different functionality. The morpheein concept provides a new framework for understanding allosteric regulation, kinetic cooperativity and hysteresis. Porphobilinogen synthase constitutes a prototype morpheein ensemble comprising several interconverting quaternary structure isoforms; one monomer conformation dictates assembly of a high-activity octamer, whereas an alternative monomer conformation dictates assembly of a low-activity hexamer. It is proposed here that the behavior of some other allosteric enzymes reflect dynamic morpheein equilibrium systems and six candidate proteins are enumerated.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Químicos , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Regulación Alostérica , Cinética , Conformación Proteica , Relación Estructura-Actividad
17.
Front Mol Biosci ; 7: 582966, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33330623

RESUMEN

Homo-multimeric proteins that can come apart, change shape, and reassemble differently with functional consequences have been called morpheeins and/or transformers; these provide a largely unexplored context for understanding disease and developing allosteric therapeutics. This article describes such proteins within the context of protein structure dynamics, provides one detailed example related to an inborn error of metabolism and potential herbicide development, and describes the context for applying these ideas for understanding disease and designing bioactive molecules, such as therapeutics.

18.
Prog Mol Biol Transl Sci ; 169: 85-104, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31952692

RESUMEN

Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) is an essential enzyme that catalyzes an early step in heme biosynthesis. An unexpected human PBGS quaternary structure dynamic drove the definition of morpheeins, which are protein multimers that dissociate, change shape, and re-assemble differently with functional consequences. Each PBGS monomer has two domains that can reposition through a hinge motion. Human PBGS exists in an equilibrium among high activity octamer, low activity hexamer, and low mole-fraction dimer in which the hinge motion occurs. The dimer conformation dictates the multimer architecture. An octamer-specific inter-subunit interaction responds to pH, resulting in a pH-dependence to the octamer-hexamer equilibrium. An inborn error of metabolism, ALAD porphyria, is caused by single amino acid substitutions that stabilize the hexamer relative to octamer. Drugs that stabilize the PBGS hexamer result in a drug side effect that can exacerbate porphyria. PBGS is essential for all organisms that require respiration, photosynthesis, or methanogenesis. Consequently, phylogenetic variation in PBGS multimerization equilibria provides insight into how Nature has harnessed oligomeric variation in the control of protein function. The dynamic multimerization of PBGS revealed the morpheein mechanism for allostery, a structural basis for inborn errors of metabolism, a quaternary structure focus for drug discovery and/or drug side effects, and a pathway toward new antibiotics or herbicides. The fortuitous discovery of PBGS quaternary structure dynamics arose from characterization of a low-activity single amino acid variant that dramatically stabilized the hexamer, whose existence had previously gone unnoticed.


Asunto(s)
Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Sitio Alostérico , Artefactos , Catálisis , Diseño de Fármacos , Humanos , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Modelos Moleculares , Filogenia , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/deficiencia , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Porfirias Hepáticas , Isoformas de Proteínas , Multimerización de Proteína , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína
19.
Chem Biol ; 15(6): 586-96, 2008 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18559269

RESUMEN

Enzymes that regulate their activity by modulating an equilibrium of alternate, nonadditive, functionally distinct oligomeric assemblies (morpheeins) constitute a recently described mode of allostery. The oligomeric equilibrium for porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) consists of high-activity octamers, low-activity hexamers, and two dimer conformations. A phylogenetically diverse allosteric site specific to hexamers is proposed as an inhibitor binding site. Inhibitor binding is predicted to draw the oligomeric equilibrium toward the low-activity hexamer. In silico docking enriched a selection from a small-molecule library for compounds predicted to bind to this allosteric site. In vitro testing of selected compounds identified one compound whose inhibition mechanism is species-specific conversion of PBGS octamers to hexamers. We propose that this strategy for inhibitor discovery can be applied to other proteins that use the morpheein model for allosteric regulation.


Asunto(s)
Diseño de Fármacos , Sitio Alostérico , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Dimerización , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Modelos Moleculares , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Estructura Molecular , Homología de Secuencia de Aminoácido
20.
Biochemistry ; 47(40): 10649-56, 2008 Oct 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18795796

RESUMEN

The enzyme porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) can exist in different nonadditive homooligomeric assemblies, and under appropriate conditions, the distribution of these assemblies can respond to ligands such as metals or substrate. PBGS from most organisms was believed to be octameric until work on a rare allele of human PBGS revealed an alternate hexameric assembly, which is also available to the wild-type enzyme at elevated pH [Breinig, S., et al. (2003) Nat. Struct. Biol. 10, 757-763]. Herein, we establish that the distribution of pea PBGS quaternary structures also contains octamers and hexamers, using both sedimentation velocity and sedimentation equilibrium experiments. We report results in which the octamer dominates under purification conditions and discuss conditions that influence the octamer:hexamer ratio. As predicted by PBGS crystal structures from related organisms, in the absence of magnesium, the octameric assembly is significantly destabilized, and the oligomeric distribution is dominated largely by the hexameric assembly. Although the PBGS hexamer-to-octamer oligomeric rearrangement is well documented under some conditions, both assemblies are very stable (under AU conditions) in the time frame of our ultracentrifuge experiments.


Asunto(s)
Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/química , Ultracentrifugación/métodos , Dimerización , Electroforesis en Gel de Poliacrilamida , Estabilidad de Enzimas , Cloruro de Magnesio/farmacología , Modelos Moleculares , Porfobilinógeno Sintasa/metabolismo , Unión Proteica/efectos de los fármacos , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína/efectos de los fármacos , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína/efectos de los fármacos
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