According to the domain alternation mechanism and crystal structure evidence, the acyl-CoA synthetases, one of three subgroups of a superfamily of adenylating enzymes, catalyze adenylate- and thioester-forming half-reactions in two different conformations. The enzymes accomplish this by presenting two active sites through an similar to 140 degrees rotation of the C-domain. The second half-reaction catalyzed by another subgroup, the beetle luciferases, is a mechanistically dissimilar oxidative process that produces bioluminescence. We have demonstrated that a firefly luciferase variant containing cysteine residues at positions 108 and 447 can be intramolecularly cross-linked by 1,2-bis(maleimido)ethane, trapping the enzyme in a C-domain-rotated conformation previously undocumented in the available luciferase crystal structures. The cross-linked luciferase cannot adenylate luciferin but is nearly fully capable of bioluminescence with synthetic luciferyl adenylate because it retains the ability to carry out the oxidative half-reaction. The cross-linked luciferase is apparently trapped in a conformation similar to those adopted by acyl-CoA synthetases as they convert acyl adenylates into the corresponding CoA thioesters.
机构:
SUNY Buffalo, Hauptman Woodward Med Res Inst, Buffalo, NY 14203 USA
SUNY Buffalo, Dept Biol Struct, Buffalo, NY 14203 USASUNY Buffalo, Hauptman Woodward Med Res Inst, Buffalo, NY 14203 USA
机构:
SUNY Buffalo, Hauptman Woodward Med Res Inst, Buffalo, NY 14203 USA
SUNY Buffalo, Dept Biol Struct, Buffalo, NY 14203 USASUNY Buffalo, Hauptman Woodward Med Res Inst, Buffalo, NY 14203 USA