Substrate Dynamics Contribute to Enzymatic Specificity in Human and Bacterial Methionine Adenosyltransferases.
Madhuri GadeLi Lynn TanAdam M DamryMahakaran SandhuJoseph S BrockAndie R DelaneyAlejandro Villar-BrionesColin J JacksonPaola LaurinoPublished in: JACS Au (2021)
Protein conformational changes can facilitate the binding of noncognate substrates and underlying promiscuous activities. However, the contribution of substrate conformational dynamics to this process is comparatively poorly understood. Here, we analyze human (hMAT2A) and Escherichia coli (eMAT) methionine adenosyltransferases that have identical active sites but different substrate specificity. In the promiscuous hMAT2A, noncognate substrates bind in a stable conformation to allow catalysis. In contrast, noncognate substrates sample stable productive binding modes less frequently in eMAT owing to altered mobility in the enzyme active site. Different cellular concentrations of substrates likely drove the evolutionary divergence of substrate specificity in these orthologues. The observation of catalytic promiscuity in hMAT2A led to the detection of a new human metabolite, methyl thioguanosine, that is produced at elevated levels in a cancer cell line. This work establishes that identical active sites can result in different substrate specificity owing to the effects of substrate and enzyme dynamics.
Keyphrases
- structural basis
- endothelial cells
- amino acid
- escherichia coli
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- pluripotent stem cells
- molecular dynamics
- squamous cell carcinoma
- binding protein
- gene expression
- single molecule
- nitric oxide
- computed tomography
- staphylococcus aureus
- genome wide
- young adults
- protein protein
- crystal structure