BARC/PUB/2017/0809

 
 

Active site gate of M32 carboxypeptidases illuminated by crystal structure and molecular dynamics simulations

 
     
 
Author(s)

Sharma, B.; Jamdar, S. N.; Ghosh, B.; Yadav, P.; Ashwani Kumar; Kundu, S.; Goyal, V. D.; Makde, R. D.
(HP&SRPD;FTD)

Source

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta-Proteins and Proteomics, 2017. Vol. 1865 (11): pp. 1406-1415

ABSTRACT

Enzyme gates are important dynamic features that regulate function. Study of these features is critical for understanding of enzyme mechanism. In this study, the active-site gate of M32 carboxypeptidases (M32CP) is illuminated. Only a handful of members of this family have been structurally and functionally characterized and various aspects of their activity and mechanism are yet not clarified. Here, crystal structure of putative M32CP from Deinococcus radiodurans (M32dr) was solved to 2.4 Å resolution. Enzymatic assays confirmed its identity as a carboxypeptidase. Open and relatively closed conformations observed in the structure provided supporting evidence for previously hypothesized hinge motion in this family of enzymes. Molecular dynamics simulations of 1.5 μs displayed distinct open and closed conformations revealing amplitude of the motion to be beyond what was observed in the crystal structure. Hinge region and anchoring region of this shell-type gate were identified. A small displacement of 3 Å and a helical tilt of 9° propagated by the hinge region translates into a 10 Å motion at the top of the gate. The dynamics of the gate was supported by our mutagenesis experiment involving formation of disulphide bond across helices of the gate. The nearly inactive mutant enzyme showed 65-fold increase in the enzymatic activity in presence of reducing agent. Further, while a previously proposed structural basis would have led to its classification in subfamily II, experimentally observed substrate length restriction places M32dr in subfamily I of M32CPs.

 
 
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