4.8 Article

Structure, function, and folding of phosphoglycerate kinase are strongly perturbed by macromolecular crowding

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1006760107

Keywords

enzymatic activity; FRET; folding kinetics; thermal denaturation; protein conformational changes

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [MCB 1019958, MCB 0919974]
  2. NSF Center for the Physics of Living Cells
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences
  4. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience [1019958] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We combine experiment and computer simulation to show how macromolecular crowding dramatically affects the structure, function, and folding landscape of phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK). Fluorescence labeling shows that compact states of yeast PGK are populated as the amount of crowding agents (Ficoll 70) increases. Coarse-grained molecular simulations reveal three compact ensembles: C (crystal structure), CC (collapsed crystal), and Sph (spherical compact). With an adjustment for viscosity, crowded wild-type PGK and fluorescent PGK are about 15 times or more active in 200 mg/ml Ficoll than in aqueous solution. Our results suggest a previously undescribed solution to the classic problem of how the ADP and diphosphoglycerate binding sites of PGK come together to make ATP: Rather than undergoing a hinge motion, the ADP and substrate sites are already located in proximity under crowded conditions that mimic the in vivo conditions under which the enzyme actually operates. We also examine T-jump unfolding of PGK as a function of crowding experimentally. We uncover a nonmonotonic folding relaxation time vs. Ficoll concentration. Theory and modeling explain why an optimum concentration exists for fastest folding. Below the optimum, folding slows down because the unfolded state is stabilized relative to the transition state. Above the optimum, folding slows down because of increased viscosity.

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