Trimethyllysine 72 (tmK72) has been suggested to play a role in sterically
constraining the heme crevice dynamics of yeast iso-1-cytochrome c
mediated by the Ω-loop D cooperative substructure (residues 70 to 85). A tmK72A
mutation causes a gain in peroxidase activity, a function of cytochrome c
that is important early in apoptosis. More than one higher energy state is accessible for
the Ω-loop D substructure via tier 0 dynamics. Two of these are alkaline conformers
mediated by Lys73 and Lys79. In the current work, the effect of the tmK72A mutation on the
thermodynamic and kinetic properties of wild type iso-1-cytochrome c (yWT
versus WT*) and on variants carrying a K73H mutation (yWT/K73H versus WT*/K73H) is
studied. Whereas the tmK72A mutation confers increased peroxidase activity in wild type
yeast iso-1-cytochrome c and increased dynamics for formation of a
previously studied His79-heme alkaline conformer, the tmK72A mutation speeds return of the
His73-heme alkaline conformer to the native state through destabilization of the
His73-heme alkaline conformer relative to the native conformer. These opposing behaviors
demonstrate that the response of the dynamics of a protein substructure to mutation
depends on the nature of the perturbation to the substructure. For a protein substructure
which mediates more than one function of a protein through multiple non-native structures,
a mutation could change the partitioning between these functions. The current results
suggest that the tier 0 dynamics of Ω-loop D that mediates peroxidase activity has
similarities to the tier 0 dynamics required to form the His79-heme alkaline
conformer.
The central importance of chorismate enzymes in bacteria, fungi, parasites, and plants combined with their absence in mammals makes them attractive targets for antimicrobials and herbicides. Two of these enzymes, anthranilate synthase (AS) and aminodeoxychorismate synthase (ADCS), are structurally and mechanistically similar. The first catalytic step, amination at C2, is common between them, but AS additionally catalyzes pyruvate elimination, aromatizing the aminated intermediate to anthranilate. Despite prior attempts, the conversion of a pyruvate elimination-deficient enzyme into an elimination-proficient one has not been reported. Janus, a bioinformatics method for predicting mutations required to functionally interconvert homologous enzymes, was employed to predict mutations to convert ADCS into AS. A genetic selection on a library of Janus-predicted mutations was performed. Complementation of an AS-deficient strain of Escherichia coli grown on minimal medium led to several ADCS mutants that allow growth in 6 days compared to 2 days for wild-type AS. The purified mutant enzymes catalyze the conversion of chorismate to anthranilate at rates that are ∼50% of the rate of wild-type ADCS-catalyzed conversion of chorismate to aminodeoxychorismate. The residues mutated do not contact the substrate. Molecular dynamics studies suggest that pyruvate elimination is controlled by the conformation of the C2-aminated intermediate. Enzymes that catalyze elimination favor the equatorial conformation, which presents the C2-H to a conserved active site lysine (Lys424) for deprotonation and maximizes stereoelectronic activation. Acid/base catalysis of pyruvate elimination was confirmed in AS and salicylate synthase by showing incorporation of a solvent-derived proton into the pyruvate methyl group and by solvent kinetic isotope effects on pyruvate elimination catalyzed by AS.
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