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Structure of an AMPK complex in an inactive, ATP-bound state.

Yan YanSomnath MukherjeeKaleeckal G HarikumarTimothy S StrutzenbergX Edward ZhouKelly Suino-PowellTing-Hai XuRyan D SheldonJared LampJoseph S BrunzelleKatarzyna RadziwonAbigail E EllisScott J NovickIrving E VegaRussell G JonesLaurence J MillerH Eric XuPatrick R GriffinAnthony A KossiakoffKarsten Melcher
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2021)
Adenosine monophosphate (AMP)-activated protein kinase (AMPK) regulates metabolism in response to the cellular energy states. Under energy stress, AMP stabilizes the active AMPK conformation, in which the kinase activation loop (AL) is protected from protein phosphatases, thus keeping the AL in its active, phosphorylated state. At low AMP:ATP (adenosine triphosphate) ratios, ATP inhibits AMPK by increasing AL dynamics and accessibility. We developed conformation-specific antibodies to trap ATP-bound AMPK in a fully inactive, dynamic state and determined its structure at 3.5-angstrom resolution using cryo-electron microscopy. A 180° rotation and 100-angstrom displacement of the kinase domain fully exposes the AL. On the basis of the structure and supporting biophysical data, we propose a multistep mechanism explaining how adenine nucleotides and pharmacological agonists modulate AMPK activity by altering AL phosphorylation and accessibility.
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