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Substrate Induced Movement of the Metal Cofactor between Active and Resting State.

Stefan R MarsdenHein J WijmaMichael K F MohrInês JustoPeter Leon HagedoornJesper LaustsenCy M JeffriesDmitri I SvergunLuuk MestromDuncan G G McMillanIsabel BentoUlf Hanefeld
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Regulation of enzyme activity is vital for living organisms. In metalloenzymes, far-reaching rearrangements of the protein scaffold are generally required to tune the metal cofactor's properties by allosteric regulation. Here structural analysis of hydroxyketoacid aldolase from Sphingomonas wittichii RW1 (SwHKA) revealed a dynamic movement of the metal cofactor between two coordination spheres without protein scaffold rearrangements. In its resting state configuration (M 2+ R ), the metal constitutes an integral part of the dimer interface within the overall hexameric assembly, but sterical constraints do not allow for substrate binding. Conversely, a second coordination sphere constitutes the catalytically active state (M 2+ A ) at 2.4 Å distance. Bidentate coordination of a ketoacid substrate to M 2+ A affords the overall lowest energy complex, which drives the transition from M 2+ R to M 2+ A . While not described earlier, this type of regulation may be widespread and largely overlooked due to low occupancy of some of its states in protein crystal structures.
Keyphrases
  • resting state
  • functional connectivity
  • amino acid
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • diabetic rats
  • multidrug resistant
  • drug induced
  • gram negative
  • dna binding