4.8 Article

Structure elucidation of the elusive Enzyme I monomer reveals the molecular mechanisms linking oligomerization and enzymatic activity

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2100298118

关键词

phosphotransferase system; carbon metabolism; solution NMR; enzyme regulation; high pressure

资金

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R35GM133488]
  2. Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust
  3. Intramural Research Program of the NIH, the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease
  4. Iowa State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

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Enzyme I (EI) is a phosphotransferase enzyme responsible for converting phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) into pyruvate in the bacterial phosphotransferase (PTS) transduction pathway. By mutating the dimerization domain of EI (EIC) and applying hydrostatic pressure to study the dissociation process, researchers were able to characterize the monomeric state of EI at atomic level. The study reveals the role of catalytic loops as allosteric connectors controlling both the activity and oligomerization of the enzyme.
Enzyme I (EI) is a phosphotransferase enzyme responsible for converting phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) into pyruvate. This reaction initiates a five-step phosphorylation cascade in the bacterial phosphotransferase (PTS) transduction pathway. Under physiological conditions, EI exists in an equilibrium between a functional dimer and an inactive monomer. The monomer-dimer equilibrium is a crucial factor regulating EI activity and the phosphorylation state of the overall PTS. Experimental studies of EI's monomeric state have yet been hampered by the dimer's high thermodynamic stability, which prevents its characterization by standard structural techniques. In this study, we modified the dimerization domain of EI (EIC) by mutating three amino acids involved in the formation of intersubunit salt bridges. The engineered variant forms an active dimer in solution that can bind and hydrolyze PEP. Using hydrostatic pressure as an additional perturbation, we were then able to study the complete dissociation of the variant from 1 bar to 2.5 kbar in the absence and the presence of EI natural ligands. Backbone residual dipolar couplings collected under high-pressure conditions allowed us to determine the conformational ensemble of the isolated EIC monomeric state in solution. Our calculations reveal that three catalytic loops near the dimerization interface become unstructured upon monomerization, preventing the monomeric enzyme from binding its natural substrate. This study provides an atomic-level characterization of EI's monomeric state and highlights the role of the catalytic loops as allosteric connectors controlling both the activity and oligomerization of the enzyme.

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