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1.
Biochemistry ; 57(45): 6387-6390, 2018 11 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30339352

RESUMO

Protein kinases achieve substrate selective phosphorylation through their conformational flexibility and dynamic interaction with the substrate. Designing substrate selective or kinase selective small molecule inhibitors remains a challenge because of a lack of understanding of the dynamic mechanism by which substrates are selected by the kinase. Using a combination of all-atom molecular dynamics simulations and FRET sensors, we have delineated an allosteric mechanism that results in interaction among the DFG motif, G-loop, and activation loop and structurally links the nucleotide and substrate binding interfaces in protein kinase Cα and three other Ser/Thr kinases. ATP-competitive staurosporine analogues engage this allosteric switch region located just outside the ATP binding site to displace substrate binding to varying degrees. These inhibitors function as bitopic ligands by occupying the ATP binding site and interacting with the allosteric switch region. The conserved mechanism identified in this study can be exploited to select and design bitopic inhibitors for kinases.


Assuntos
Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Proteína Quinase C-alfa/antagonistas & inibidores , Proteína Quinase C-alfa/metabolismo , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/farmacologia , Regulação Alostérica , Sítio Alostérico , Sítios de Ligação , Humanos , Ligantes , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Fosforilação , Serina/química , Serina/metabolismo , Treonina/química , Treonina/metabolismo
2.
J Biol Chem ; 292(39): 16300-16309, 2017 09 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28821615

RESUMO

Protein kinase Cα (PKCα) belongs to the family of AGC kinases that phosphorylate multiple peptide substrates. Although the consensus sequence motif has been identified and used to explain substrate specificity for PKCα, it does not inform the structural basis of substrate-binding and kinase activity for diverse substrates phosphorylated by this kinase. The transient, dynamic, and unstructured nature of this protein-protein interaction has limited structural mapping of kinase-substrate interfaces. Here, using multiscale MD simulation-based predictions and FRET sensor-based experiments, we investigated the conformational dynamics of the kinase-substrate interface. We found that the binding strength of the kinase-substrate interaction is primarily determined by long-range columbic interactions between basic (Arg/Lys) residues located N-terminally to the phosphorylated Ser/Thr residues in the substrate and by an acidic patch in the kinase catalytic domain. Kinase activity stemmed from conformational flexibility in the region C-terminal to the phosphorylated Ser/Thr residues. Flexibility of the substrate-kinase interaction enabled an Arg/Lys two to three amino acids C-terminal to the phosphorylated Ser/Thr to prime a catalytically active conformation, facilitating phosphoryl transfer to the substrate. The structural mechanisms determining substrate binding and catalytic activity formed the basis of diverse binding affinities and kinase activities of PKCα for 14 substrates with varying degrees of sequence conservation. Our findings provide insight into the dynamic properties of the kinase-substrate interaction that govern substrate binding and turnover. Moreover, this study establishes a modeling and experimental method to elucidate the structural dynamics underlying substrate selectivity among eukaryotic kinases.


Assuntos
Modelos Moleculares , Proteína Quinase C-alfa/metabolismo , Substituição de Aminoácidos , Animais , Biocatálise , Domínio Catalítico , Biologia Computacional , Transferência Ressonante de Energia de Fluorescência , Humanos , Cinética , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Mutação , Fosforilação , Conformação Proteica , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Domínios e Motivos de Interação entre Proteínas , Proteína Quinase C-alfa/química , Proteína Quinase C-alfa/genética , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Células Sf9 , Spodoptera , Homologia Estrutural de Proteína
3.
Mol Biol Evol ; 33(4): 971-9, 2016 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26681154

RESUMO

The means by which superfamilies of specialized enzymes arise by gene duplication and functional divergence are poorly understood. The escape from adaptive conflict hypothesis, which posits multiple copies of a gene encoding a primitive inefficient and highly promiscuous generalist ancestor, receives support from experiments showing that resurrected ancestral enzymes are indeed more substrate-promiscuous than their modern descendants. Here, we provide evidence in support of an alternative model, the innovation-amplification-divergence hypothesis, which posits a single-copied ancestor as efficient and specific as any modern enzyme. We argue that the catalytic mechanisms of plant esterases and descendent acetone cyanohydrin lyases are incompatible with each other (e.g., the reactive substrate carbonyl must bind in opposite orientations in the active site). We then show that resurrected ancestral plant esterases are as catalytically specific as modern esterases, that the ancestor of modern acetone cyanohydrin lyases was itself only very weakly promiscuous, and that improvements in lyase activity came at the expense of esterase activity. These observations support the innovation-amplification-divergence hypothesis, in which an ancestor gains a weak promiscuous activity that is improved by selection at the expense of the ancestral activity, and not the escape from adaptive conflict in which an inefficient generalist ancestral enzyme steadily loses promiscuity throughout the transition to a highly active specialized modern enzyme.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Variação Genética , Hidrolases/genética , Filogenia , Aldeído Liases/genética , Catálise , Domínio Catalítico , Duplicação Gênica
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(3): 1046-56, 2016 Jan 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26736133

RESUMO

Catalytic promiscuity is a useful, but accidental, enzyme property, so finding catalytically promiscuous enzymes in nature is inefficient. Some ancestral enzymes were branch points in the evolution of new enzymes and are hypothesized to have been promiscuous. To test the hypothesis that ancestral enzymes were more promiscuous than their modern descendants, we reconstructed ancestral enzymes at four branch points in the divergence hydroxynitrile lyases (HNL's) from esterases ∼ 100 million years ago. Both enzyme types are α/ß-hydrolase-fold enzymes and have the same catalytic triad, but differ in reaction type and mechanism. Esterases catalyze hydrolysis via an acyl enzyme intermediate, while lyases catalyze an elimination without an intermediate. Screening ancestral enzymes and their modern descendants with six esterase substrates and six lyase substrates found higher catalytic promiscuity among the ancestral enzymes (P < 0.01). Ancestral esterases were more likely to catalyze a lyase reaction than modern esterases, and the ancestral HNL was more likely to catalyze ester hydrolysis than modern HNL's. One ancestral enzyme (HNL1) along the path from esterase to hydroxynitrile lyases was especially promiscuous and catalyzed both hydrolysis and lyase reactions with many substrates. A broader screen tested mechanistically related reactions that were not selected for by evolution: decarboxylation, Michael addition, γ-lactam hydrolysis and 1,5-diketone hydrolysis. The ancestral enzymes were more promiscuous than their modern descendants (P = 0.04). Thus, these reconstructed ancestral enzymes are catalytically promiscuous, but HNL1 is especially so.


Assuntos
Aldeído Liases/metabolismo , Biocatálise , Esterases/metabolismo , Aldeído Liases/química , Ácidos Carboxílicos/química , Ácidos Carboxílicos/metabolismo , Esterases/química , Ésteres/química , Ésteres/metabolismo , Cianeto de Hidrogênio/química , Cianeto de Hidrogênio/metabolismo , Hidrólise , Nitrilas/química , Nitrilas/metabolismo
5.
Chembiochem ; 13(15): 2290-300, 2012 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23001740

RESUMO

A pH-based high-throughput assay method has been developed for the rapid and reliable measurement of transketolase (TK) activity. The method is based on the decarboxylation of lithium hydroxypyruvate (HPA) as a hydroxyacetyl donor with an aldehyde acceptor, using phenol red as the pH indicator. Upon release of carbon dioxide from HPA, the pH increase in the reaction mixture can be determined photometrically by the color change of the pH indicator. At low buffer concentration (2 mM triethanolamine, pH 7.5), the method is highly sensitive and allows continuous monitoring, for quantitative determination of the kinetic parameters. By using this method, the substrate specificities of the TK enzymes from Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as well as two active-site-modified variants of the E. coli TK (D469E, H26Y) were evaluated against a panel of substrate analogues; specific activities and kinetic constants could be rapidly determined. Substrate quality indicated by assay determination was substantiated with novel TK applications by using achiral 3-hydroxypropanal and 4-hydroxybutanal for preparative synthesis of chiral deoxyketose-type products. Determination of ee for the latter could be performed by chiral GC analysis, with an unambiguous correlation of the absolute configuration from rotation data. This pH-based assay method is broadly applicable and allows rapid, sensitive, and reliable screening of the substrate tolerance of known TK enzymes and variants obtained from directed evolution.


Assuntos
Ensaios Enzimáticos/métodos , Escherichia coli/enzimologia , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala/métodos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzimologia , Transcetolase/metabolismo , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Fenolsulfonaftaleína/análise , Piruvatos/metabolismo , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Especificidade por Substrato
6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 51(3): 480-3, 2015 Jan 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25415647

RESUMO

Directed evolution of the thermostable transketolase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus based on a pH-based colorimetric screening of smart libraries yielded several mutants with up to 16-fold higher activity for aliphatic aldehydes and high enantioselectivity (>95% ee) in the asymmetric carboligation step.


Assuntos
Aldeídos/química , Transcetolase/metabolismo , Sítios de Ligação , Cristalografia por Raios X , Estabilidade Enzimática , Geobacillus/enzimologia , Modelos Biológicos , Mutação , Estereoisomerismo , Temperatura , Transcetolase/química , Transcetolase/genética
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