4.7 Article

Trimeric Architecture Ensures the Stability and Biological Activity of the Calf Purine Nucleoside Phosphorylase: In Silico and In Vitro Studies of Monomeric and Trimeric Forms of the Enzyme

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Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms24032157

Keywords

purine nucleoside phosphorylase; homooligomeric proteins; obligate (obligatory) oligomer; subunit-subunit interface; rearrangement of the active site; tertiary; quaternary structure; in silico; in vivo; in vitro

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To investigate the reason for the trimeric structure of PNP, researchers constructed the monomeric form of the enzyme and found that the isolated monomer may have a non-functional active site. To confirm this, six amino acids at the subunit interface were mutated, resulting in a monomeric form (6Ala PNP) that showed no enzymatic activity. Simulation experiments revealed that the positions of the amino acids in the active site of 6Ala PNP significantly differed from the wild type, suggesting that a trimeric structure is necessary for stabilizing the active site geometry.
Mammalian purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) is biologically active as a homotrimer, in which each monomer catalyzes a reaction independently of the others. To answer the question of why the native PNP forms a trimeric structure, we constructed, in silico and in vitro, the monomeric form of the enzyme. Molecular dynamics simulations showed different geometries of the active site in the non-mutated trimeric and monomeric PNP forms, which suggested that the active site in the isolated monomer could be non-functional. To confirm this hypothesis, six amino acids located at the interface of the subunits were selected and mutated to alanines to disrupt the trimer and obtain a monomer (6Ala PNP). The effects of these mutations on the enzyme structure, stability, conformational dynamics, and activity were examined. The solution experiments confirmed that the 6Ala PNP mutant occurs mainly as a monomer, with a secondary structure almost identical to the wild type, WT PNP, and importantly, it shows no enzymatic activity. Simulations confirmed that, although the secondary structure of the 6Ala monomer is similar to the WT PNP, the positions of the amino acids building the 6Ala PNP active site significantly differ. These data suggest that a trimeric structure is necessary to stabilize the geometry of the active site of this enzyme.

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