A trimetal site and substrate distortion in a family II inorganic pyrophosphatase

被引:44
作者
Fabrichniy, Igor P.
Lehtio, Lari
Tammenkoski, Marko
Zyryanov, Anton B.
Oksanen, Esko
Baykov, Alexander A.
Lahti, Reijo
Goldman, Adrian
机构
[1] Univ Helsinki, Inst Biotechnol, Program Struct Biol & Biophys, Bioctr 3, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland
[2] Univ Turku, Dept Biochem, Natl Grad Sch Informat & Struct Biol, FIN-20014 Turku, Finland
[3] Moscow MV Lomonosov State Univ, Belozersky Inst Physicochem Biol, Moscow 119899, Russia
[4] Moscow MV Lomonosov State Univ, Sch Chem, Moscow 119899, Russia
关键词
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M513161200
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
We report the first crystal structures of a family II pyrophosphatase complexed with a substrate analogue, imidodiphosphate (PNP). These provide new insights into the catalytic reaction mechanism of this enzyme family. We were able to capture the substrate complex both by fluoride inhibition and by site-directed mutagenesis providing complementary snapshots of the Michaelis complex. Structures of both the fluoride-inhibited wild type and the H98Q variant of the PNP-Bacillus subtilis pyrophosphatase complex show a unique trinuclear metal center. Each metal ion coordinates a terminal oxygen on the electrophilic phosphate and a lone pair on the putative nucleophile, thus placing it in line with the scissile bond without any coordination by protein. The nucleophile moves further away from the electrophilic phosphorus site, to the opposite side of the trimetal plane, upon binding of substrate. In comparison with earlier product complexes, the side chain of Lys(296) has swung in and so three positively charged side chains, His(98), Lys(205) and Lys(296), now surround the bridging nitrogen in PNP. Finally, one of the active sites in the wild-type structure appears to show evidence of substrate distortion. Binding to the enzyme may thus strain the substrate and thus enhance the catalytic rate.
引用
收藏
页码:1422 / 1431
页数:10
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