4.6 Article

Cryoelectron microscopy reveals new features in the three-dimensional structure of phosphorylase kinase

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 914-920

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1110/ps.041123905

Keywords

phosphorylase kinase; cryoelectron microscopy; three-dimensional reconstruction; single particle analysis; structural analysis

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [R01 DK032953, R56 DK032953, DK 32953] Funding Source: Medline

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Phosphorylase kinase (PhK), a regulatory enzyme in the cascade activation of glycogenolysis, is a 1.3-MDa hexadecameric complex, (a beta gamma delta)(4). PhK comprises two arched octameric (alpha beta gamma delta)(2) lobes that are oriented back-to-back with overall D-2 symmetry and connected by small bridges. These interlobal bridges, arguably the most questionable structural component of PhK, are one of several structural features that potentially are artifactually generated or altered by conventional sample preparation techniques for electron microscopy (EM). To minimize such artifacts, we have solved by cryoEM the first three-dimensional (3D) structure of nonactivated PhK from images of frozen hydrated molecules of the kinase. Minimal dose electron micrographs of PhK in vitreous ice revealed particles in a multitude of orientations. A simple model was used to orient the individual images for 3D reconstruction, followed by multiple rounds of refinement. Three-dimensional reconstruction of nonactivated PhK from approximately 5000 particles revealed a bridged, bilobal molecule with a resolution estimated by Fourier shell correlation analysis at 25 angstrom. This new structure suggests that several prominent features observed in the structure of PhK derived from negatively stained particles arise as artifacts of specimen preparation. In comparison to the structure from negative staining, the cryoEM structure shows three important differences: (1) a dihedral angle between the two lobes of approximately 90 degrees instead of 68 degrees, (2) a compact rather than extended structure for the lobes, and (3) the presence of four, rather than two, connecting bridges, which provides the first direct evidence for these components as authentic elements of the kinase solution structure.

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