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Phosphate Binding in PNP Alters Transition-State Analogue Affinity and Subunit Cooperativity.

Yacoba V T MinnowVern L SchrammSteven C AlmoAgnidipta Ghosh
Published in: Biochemistry (2023)
Purine nucleoside phosphorylases (PNPs) catalyze the phosphorolysis of 6-oxypurine nucleosides with an HPO 4 2- dianion nucleophile. Nucleosides and phosphate occupy distinct pockets in the PNP active site. Evaluation of the HPO 4 2- site by mutagenesis, cooperative binding studies, and thermodynamic and structural analysis demonstrate that alterations in the HPO 4 2- binding site can render PNP inactive and significantly impact subunit cooperativity and binding to transition-state analogue inhibitors. Cooperative interactions between the cationic transition-state analogue and the anionic HPO 4 2- nucleophile demonstrate the importance of reforming the transition-state ensemble for optimal inhibition with transition-state analogues. Altered phosphate binding in the catalytic site mutants helps to explain one of the known lethal PNP deficiency syndromes in humans.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • dna binding
  • machine learning
  • protein kinase
  • neural network
  • crystal structure