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Photo Lynn Kamerlin

Lynn Kamerlin

Professor

Photo Lynn Kamerlin

Allosteric rescue of catalytically impaired ATP phosphoribosyltransferase variants links protein dynamics to active-site electrostatic preorganisation

Author

  • Gemma Fisher
  • Marina Corbella
  • Magnus S Alphey
  • John Nicholson
  • Benjamin J Read
  • Shina C L Kamerlin
  • Rafael G da Silva

Summary, in English

ATP phosphoribosyltransferase catalyses the first step of histidine biosynthesis and is controlled via a complex allosteric mechanism where the regulatory protein HisZ enhances catalysis by the catalytic protein HisGS while mediating allosteric inhibition by histidine. Activation by HisZ was proposed to position HisGS Arg56 to stabilise departure of the pyrophosphate leaving group. Here we report active-site mutants of HisGS with impaired reaction chemistry which can be allosterically restored by HisZ despite the HisZ:HisGS interface lying ~20 Å away from the active site. MD simulations indicate HisZ binding constrains the dynamics of HisGS to favour a preorganised active site where both Arg56 and Arg32 are poised to stabilise leaving-group departure in WT-HisGS. In the Arg56Ala-HisGS mutant, HisZ modulates Arg32 dynamics so that it can partially compensate for the absence of Arg56. These results illustrate how remote protein-protein interactions translate into catalytic resilience by restoring damaged electrostatic preorganisation at the active site.

Publishing year

2022-12-09

Language

English

Publication/Series

Nature Communications

Volume

13

Issue

1

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Keywords

  • ATP Phosphoribosyltransferase/chemistry
  • Catalytic Domain
  • Histidine/metabolism
  • Allosteric Regulation

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2041-1723