4.7 Article

Structural insights on binding mechanism of CAD complexes (CPSase, ATCase and DHOase)

期刊

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE & DYNAMICS
卷 39, 期 9, 页码 3144-3157

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07391102.2020.1761877

关键词

CAD; alanine scanning mutagenesis; pyrimidine biosynthesis; protein-protein interactions

资金

  1. DBT, New Delhi, India [BT/PR4524/BID/7/388/2012]
  2. DBT [BT/PR15407/BRB/10/923/2011]
  3. University Grants Commission, New Delhi, India [F.14-13/2013 (Inno/ASIST)]
  4. DST [SR/SO/BB-0079/2012]
  5. DST-Fund for Improvement of S&T Infrastructure in Universities & Higher Educational Institutions (FIST) [SR/FST/LSI-667/2016)(C)]
  6. DST-Promotion of University Research and Scientific Excellence (PURSE) [SR/PURSE Phase 2/38 (G)]
  7. RUSA-Phase 2.0. [F.24-51/2014]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study focused on the structure and function of enzymes in the pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway, particularly the role of CAD enzymes in cellular mechanisms. Through molecular modeling and dynamics studies of CAD complexes, key residues impacting their binding mode and enzyme activity were identified.
Pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway enzymes constitute an important target for the development of antitumor drugs. To understand the role of binding mechanisms underlying the inborn errors of pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway, structure and function of enzymes have been analyzed. Pyrimidine biosynthetic pathway is initiated by CAD enzymes that harbor the first three enzymatic activities facilitated by Carbamoyl Phosphate Synthetase (CPSase), Aspartate Transcarbamoylase (ATCase) and Dihydroorotase (DHOase). While being an attractive therapeutic target, the lack of data driven us to study the CPSase (CarA and CarB) and its mode of binding to ATCase and DHOase which are the major limitation for its structural optimization. Understanding the binding mode of CPSase, ATCase and DHOase could help to identify the potential interface hotspot residues that favor the mechanism behind it. The mechanistic insight into the CAD complexes were achieved through Molecular modeling, Protein-Protein docking, Alanine scanning and Molecular dynamics (MD) Studies. The hotspot residues present in the CarB region of carboxy phosphate and carbamoyl phosphate synthetic domains are responsible for the assembly of CAD (CPSase-ATCase-DHOase) complexes. Overall analysis suggests that the identified hotspot residues were confirmed by alanine scanning and important for the regulation of pyrimidine biosynthesis. MD simulations analysis provided the prolonged stability of the interacting complexes. The present study reveals the novel hotspot residues such as Glu134, Glu147, Glu154, Asp266, Lys269, Glu274, Asp333, Trp459, Asp526, Asp528, Glu533, Glu544, Glu546, Glu800, Val855, Asp877, Tyr884 and Gln919 which could be targeted for structure-based inhibitor design to potentiate the CAD mediated regulation of aggressive tumors. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

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