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Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase

Understanding how enzymes achieve their tremendous catalytic power is a major question in biochemistry. Greater understanding is also needed for enzyme engineering applications. In many cases, enzyme efficiency and specificity depend on residues not in direct contact with the substrate, termed remot...

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Autores principales: Ngu, Lisa, Winters, Jenifer N., Nguyen, Kien, Ramos, Kevin E., DeLateur, Nicholas A., Makowski, Lee, Whitford, Paul C., Ondrechen, Mary Jo, Beuning, Penny J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7004355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32027716
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228487
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author Ngu, Lisa
Winters, Jenifer N.
Nguyen, Kien
Ramos, Kevin E.
DeLateur, Nicholas A.
Makowski, Lee
Whitford, Paul C.
Ondrechen, Mary Jo
Beuning, Penny J.
author_facet Ngu, Lisa
Winters, Jenifer N.
Nguyen, Kien
Ramos, Kevin E.
DeLateur, Nicholas A.
Makowski, Lee
Whitford, Paul C.
Ondrechen, Mary Jo
Beuning, Penny J.
author_sort Ngu, Lisa
collection PubMed
description Understanding how enzymes achieve their tremendous catalytic power is a major question in biochemistry. Greater understanding is also needed for enzyme engineering applications. In many cases, enzyme efficiency and specificity depend on residues not in direct contact with the substrate, termed remote residues. This work focuses on Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase (OTC), which plays a central role in amino acid metabolism. OTC has been reported to undergo an induced-fit conformational change upon binding its first substrate, carbamoyl phosphate (CP), and several residues important for activity have been identified. Using computational methods based on the computed chemical properties from theoretical titration curves, sequence-based scores derived from evolutionary history, and protein surface topology, residues important for catalytic activity were predicted. The roles of these residues in OTC activity were tested by constructing mutations at predicted positions, followed by steady-state kinetics assays and substrate binding studies with the variants. First-layer mutations R57A and D231A, second-layer mutation H272L, and third-layer mutation E299Q, result in 57- to 450-fold reductions in k(cat)/K(M) with respect to CP and 44- to 580-fold reductions with respect to ornithine. Second-layer mutations D140N and Y160S also reduce activity with respect to ornithine. Most variants had decreased stability relative to wild-type OTC, with variants H272L, H272N, and E299Q having the greatest decreases. Variants H272L, E299Q, and R57A also show compromised CP binding. In addition to direct effects on catalytic activity, effects on overall protein stability and substrate binding were observed that reveal the intricacies of how these residues contribute to catalysis.
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spelling pubmed-70043552020-02-19 Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase Ngu, Lisa Winters, Jenifer N. Nguyen, Kien Ramos, Kevin E. DeLateur, Nicholas A. Makowski, Lee Whitford, Paul C. Ondrechen, Mary Jo Beuning, Penny J. PLoS One Research Article Understanding how enzymes achieve their tremendous catalytic power is a major question in biochemistry. Greater understanding is also needed for enzyme engineering applications. In many cases, enzyme efficiency and specificity depend on residues not in direct contact with the substrate, termed remote residues. This work focuses on Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase (OTC), which plays a central role in amino acid metabolism. OTC has been reported to undergo an induced-fit conformational change upon binding its first substrate, carbamoyl phosphate (CP), and several residues important for activity have been identified. Using computational methods based on the computed chemical properties from theoretical titration curves, sequence-based scores derived from evolutionary history, and protein surface topology, residues important for catalytic activity were predicted. The roles of these residues in OTC activity were tested by constructing mutations at predicted positions, followed by steady-state kinetics assays and substrate binding studies with the variants. First-layer mutations R57A and D231A, second-layer mutation H272L, and third-layer mutation E299Q, result in 57- to 450-fold reductions in k(cat)/K(M) with respect to CP and 44- to 580-fold reductions with respect to ornithine. Second-layer mutations D140N and Y160S also reduce activity with respect to ornithine. Most variants had decreased stability relative to wild-type OTC, with variants H272L, H272N, and E299Q having the greatest decreases. Variants H272L, E299Q, and R57A also show compromised CP binding. In addition to direct effects on catalytic activity, effects on overall protein stability and substrate binding were observed that reveal the intricacies of how these residues contribute to catalysis. Public Library of Science 2020-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7004355/ /pubmed/32027716 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228487 Text en © 2020 Ngu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ngu, Lisa
Winters, Jenifer N.
Nguyen, Kien
Ramos, Kevin E.
DeLateur, Nicholas A.
Makowski, Lee
Whitford, Paul C.
Ondrechen, Mary Jo
Beuning, Penny J.
Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
title Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
title_full Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
title_fullStr Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
title_full_unstemmed Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
title_short Probing remote residues important for catalysis in Escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
title_sort probing remote residues important for catalysis in escherichia coli ornithine transcarbamoylase
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7004355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32027716
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228487
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