4.3 Article

TM1385 from Thermotoga maritima functions as a phosphoglucose isomerase via cis-enediol-based mechanism with active site redundancy

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2021.140602

Keywords

Phosphoglucose isomerase; Thermotoga maritima; Enediol; Enzyme characterization

Funding

  1. NSF [MCB 1817735, DDGE 1315231]
  2. NIH [T32 GM008715]
  3. Double Hoo Research Grant - Jefferson Trust at the University of Virginia

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The article discusses the function and catalytic mechanism of phosphoglucose isomerase TmPGI. Experimental results show that TmPGI proceeds through a cis-enediol-based mechanism and E281 is a key amino acid residue, with H310 or K422 potentially facilitating the catalysis.
Phosphoglucose isomerases (PGIs) belong to a class of enzymes that catalyze the reversible isomerization of glucose-6-phosphate to fructose-6-phosphate. PGIs are crucial in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis pathways and proposed as serving additional extracellular functions in eukaryotic organisms. The phosphoglucose isomerase function of TM1385, a previously uncharacterized protein from Thermotoga maritima, was hypothesized based on structural similarity to established PGI crystal structures and computational docking. Kinetic and colorimetric assays combined with H-1 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy experimentally confirm that TM1385 is a phosphoglucose isomerase (TmPGI). Evidence of solvent exchange in H-1 NMR spectra supports that TmPGI isomerization proceeds through a cis-enediol-based mechanism. To determine which amino acid residues are critical for TmPGI catalysis, putative active site residues were mutated with alanine and screened for activity. Results support that E281 is most important for TmPGI formation of the cis-enediol intermediate, and the presence of either H310 or K422 may be required for catalysis, similar to previous observations from homologous PGIs. However, only TmPGI E281A/Q415A and H310A/K422A double mutations abolished activity, suggesting that there are redundant catalytic residues, and Q415 may participate in sugar phosphate isomerization upon E281 mutation. Combined, we propose that TmPGI E281 participates directly in the cis-enediol intermediate step, and either H310 or K422 may facilitate sugar ring opening and closure.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available