Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:5.4.2.8 (
phosphomannomutase
)
238
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The enzyme
phosphomannomutase
/phosphoglucomutase (PMM/PGM) from the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa is involved in the biosynthesis of several complex carbohydrates, including alginate, lipopolysaccharide, and rhamnolipid. Previous structural studies of this protein have shown that binding of substrates produces a rotation of the C-terminal domain, changing the active site from an open cleft in the apoenzyme into a deep, solvent inaccessible pocket where phosphoryl transfer takes place. We report herein site-directed mutagenesis, kinetic, and structural studies in examining the role of residues in the
hinge
between domains 3 and 4, as well as residues that participate in enzyme-substrate contacts and help form the multidomain "lid" of the active site. We find that the backbone flexibility of residues in the
hinge
region (e.g., mutation of proline to glycine/alanine) affects the efficiency of the reaction, decreasing k cat by approximately 10-fold and increasing K m by approximately 2-fold. Moreover, thermodynamic analyses show that these changes are due primarily to entropic effects, consistent with an increase in the flexibility of the polypeptide backbone leading to a decreased probability of forming a catalytically productive active site. These results for the
hinge
residues contrast with those for mutants in the active site of the enzyme, which have profound effects on enzyme kinetics (10 (2)-10 (3)-fold decrease in k cat/ K m) and also show substantial differences in their thermodynamic parameters relative to those of the wild-type (WT) enzyme. These studies support the concept that polypeptide flexibility in protein hinges may evolve to optimize and tune reaction rates.
...
PMID:Backbone flexibility, conformational change, and catalysis in a phosphohexomutase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 1869 Jul 21
Fragment complementation has been used to investigate the role of chain connectivity in the catalytic reaction of
phosphomannomutase
/phosphoglucomutase (PMM/PGM) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a human pathogen. A heterodimer of PMM/PGM, created from fragments corresponding to its first three and fourth domains, was constructed and enzyme activity reconstituted. NMR spectra demonstrate that the fragment corresponding to the fourth (C-terminal) domain exists as a highly structured, independent folding domain, consistent with its varied conformation observed in enzyme-substrate complexes. Steady-state kinetics and thermodynamics studies reported here show that complete conformational freedom of Domain 4, because of the break in the polypeptide chain, is deleterious to catalytic efficiency primarily as a consequence of increased entropy. This extends observations from studies of the intact enzyme, which showed that the degree of flexibility of a
hinge
region is controlled by the precise sequence of amino acids optimized through evolutionary constraints. This work also sheds light on the functional advantage gained by combining separate folding domains into a single polypeptide chain.
...
PMID:Breaking the covalent connection: Chain connectivity and the catalytic reaction of PMM/PGM. 2051 75
The aim of this article is to analyze conformational changes by comparing 10 different structures of Pseudomonas aeruginosa
phosphomannomutase
/phosphoglucomutase (PMM/PGM), a four-domain enzyme in which both substrate binding and catalysis require substantial movement of the C-terminal domain. We focus on changes in interdomain and active site crevices using a method called computational solvent mapping rather than superimposing the structures. The method places molecular probes (i.e., small organic molecules containing various functional groups) around the protein to find hot spots. One of the most important hot spots is in the active site, consistent with the ability of the enzyme to bind both glucose and mannose phosphosugar substrates. The protein has eight additional hot spots at domain-domain interfaces and
hinge
regions. The locations and nature of six of these hot spots vary between the open, half-open, and closed conformers of the enzyme, in good agreement with the ligand-induced conformational changes. In the closed structures the number of probe clusters at the
hinge
region significantly depends on the position of the phosphorylated oxygen in the substrate (e.g., glucose 1-phosphate versus glucose 6-phosphate), but the protein remains almost unchanged in terms of the overall RMSD, indicating that computational solvent mapping is a more sensitive approach to detect changes in binding sites and interdomain crevices. Focusing on multidomain proteins we show that the subresolution conformational differences revealed by the mapping are in fact significant, and present a general statistical method of analysis to determine the significance of rigid body domain movements in X-ray structures.
...
PMID:Domain motion and interdomain hot spots in a multidomain enzyme. 2058 4