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1.
Agrobacterium tumefaciens is a Gram‐negative bacterium and causative agent of Crown Gall disease that infects a variety of economically important plants. The annotated A. tumefaciens genome contains 10 putative dapA genes, which code for dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS). However, we have recently demonstrated that only one of these genes (dapA7) encodes a functional DHDPS. The function of the other nine putative dapA genes is yet to be determined. Here, we demonstrate using bioinformatics that the product of the dapA5 gene (DapA5) possesses all the catalytic residues canonical to 2‐keto‐3‐deoxygluconate (KDG) aldolase, which is a class I aldolase involved in glucose metabolism. We therefore expressed, purified, and characterized recombinant DapA5 using mass spectrometry, circular dichroism spectroscopy, analytical ultracentrifugation, and enzyme kinetics. The results show that DapA5 (1) adopts an α/β structure consistent with the TIM‐barrel fold of KDG aldolases, (2) possesses KDG aldolase enzyme activity, and (3) exists as a tight dimer in solution. This study shows for the first time that dapA5 from A. tumefaciens encodes a functional dimeric KDG aldolase.  相似文献   

2.
The first enzyme of the lysine-biosynthesis pathway, dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS; EC 4.2.1.52) has been purified and characterized inNicotiana sylvestris Speggazini et Comes. A purification scheme was developed for the native DHDPS that subsequently led to the purification to homogeneity of its subunits using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Subsequent elution of the purified polypeptide has opened the way for the production of rabbit polyclonal anti-DHDPS sera. The molecular weight of the enzyme was determined to be 164000 daltons (Da) by an electrophoretic method. By labeling with [14C]pyruvate, the enzyme was shown to be composed of four identical subunits of 38500 Da. Pyruvate acts as a stabilizing agent and contributes to the preservation of the tetrameric structure of the enzyme. The enzyme ofN. sylvestris is strongly inhibited by lysine with anI 0.5 of 15 μM; S-(2-aminoethyl)L-cysteine and γ-hydroxylysine, two lysine analogs, were found to be only weak inhibitors. An analog of pyruvate, 2-oxobutyrate, competitively inhibited the enzyme and was found to act at the level of the pyruvate-binding site. Dihydrodipicolinate synthase was localized in the chloroplast and identified as a soluble stromal enzyme by enzymatic and immunological methods. Its properties are compared with those known for other plant and bacterial DHDPS enzymes.  相似文献   

3.

Camelina sativa (camelina) is emerging as an alternative oilseed crop due to its short growing cycle, low input requirements, adaptability to less favorable growing environments and a seed oil profile suitable for biofuel and industrial applications. Camelina meal and oil are also registered for use in animal and fish feeds; however, like meals derived from most cereals and oilseeds, it is deficient in certain essential amino acids, such as lysine. In higher plants, the reaction catalyzed by dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) is the first committed step in the biosynthesis of lysine and is subject to regulation by lysine through feedback inhibition. Here, we report enhancement of lysine content in C. sativa seed via expression of a feedback inhibition-insensitive form of DHDPS from Corynebacterium glutamicums (CgDHDPS). Two genes encoding C. sativa DHDPS were identified and the endogenous enzyme is partially insensitive to lysine inhibition. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to examine the impact of alterations, alone and in combination, present in lysine-desensitized DHDPS isoforms from Arabidopsis thaliana DHDPS (W53R), Nicotiana tabacum (N80I) and Zea mays (E84K) on C. sativa DHDPS lysine sensitivity. When introduced alone, each of the alterations decreased sensitivity to lysine; however, enzyme specific activity was also affected. There was evidence of molecular or structural interplay between residues within the C. sativa DHDPS allosteric site as coupling of the W53R mutation with the N80V mutation decreased lysine sensitivity of the latter, but not to the level with the W53R mutation alone. Furthermore, the activity and lysine sensitivity of the triple mutant (W53R/N80V/E84T) was similar to the W53R mutation alone or the C. glutamicum DHDPS. The most active and most lysine-insensitive C. sativa DHDPS variant (W53R) was not inhibited by free lysine up to 1 mM, comparable to the C. glutamicums enzyme. Seed lysine content increased 13.6 -22.6% in CgDHDPS transgenic lines and 7.6–13.2% in the mCsDHDPS lines. The high lysine-accumulating lines from this work may be used to produce superior quality animal feed with improved essential amino acid profile.

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4.
By applying a mutagenesis/selection procedure to obtain resistance to a lysine analog, S-(2-aminoethyl)l -cysteine (AEC), a lysine overproducing mutant in Nicotiana sylvestris was isolated. Amino acid analyses performed throughout plant development and of different organs of the N. sylvestris RAEC-1 mutant, revealed a developmental-dependent accumulation of free lysine. Lysine biosynthesis in the RAEC-1 mutant was enhanced due to a lysine feedback-desensitized dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS). Several molecular approaches were undertaken to identify the nucleotide change in the dhdps-r1 gene, the mutated gene coding for the lysine-desensitized enzyme. The enzyme was purified from wild-type plants for amino end microsequencing and 10 amino acids were identified. Using dicotyledon dhdps probes, a genomic fragment was cloned from an enriched library of DNA from the homozygote RAEC-1 mutant plant. A dhdps cDNA, putatively full-length, was isolated from a tobacco cDNA library. Nucleotide sequence analyses confirmed the presence of the previously identified amino end preceded by a chloroplast transit peptide sequence. Nucleotide sequence comparisons, enzymatic and immunological analyses revealed that the tobacco cDNA corresponds to a normal type of DHDPS, lysine feedback-regulated, and the genomic fragment to the mutated DHDPS, insensitive to lysine inhibition. Functional complementation of a DHDPS-deficient Escherichia coli strain was used as an expression system. Reconstruction between the cDNA and genomic fragment led to the production of a cDNA producing an insensitive form of DHDPS. Amino acid sequence comparisons pointed out, at position 104 from the first amino acid of the mature protein, the substitution of Asn to lleu which corresponds to a dinucleotide mutation. This change is unique to the dhdps-r1 gene when compared with the wild-type sequence. The identification of the nucleotide and amino acid change of the lysine-desensitized DHDPS from RAEC-1 plant opens new perspectives for the improvement of the nutritional value of crops and possibly to develop a new plant selectable marker.  相似文献   

5.
In higher plants the essential amino acids lysine, threonine, methionine and isoleucine are synthesised through a branched pathway starting from aspartate. The key enzyme of lysine biosynthesis in this pathway—dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS)—is feedback-inhibited by lysine. The dhdps-r1 gene from a mutant Nicotiana sylvestris, which encodes a DHDPS enzyme insensitive to feedback inhibition, was used to improve the lysine content in pigeonpea seeds. The dhdps-r1 coding region driven by a phaseolin or an Arabidopsis 2S2 promoter was successfully overexpressed in the seeds of pigeonpea by using Agrobacterium transformation and particle bombardment. In 11 lines analysed, a 2- to 6-fold enhanced DHDPS activity in immature seeds at a late stage of maturation was found in comparison to wild type. The overexpression of dhdps-r1 led to an enhanced content of free lysine in the seeds of pigeonpea from 1.6 to 8.5 times compared with wild type. However, this was not reflected in an increase in total seed lysine content. This might be explained by a temporal discrepancy between maximal expression of dhdps-r1 and the rate of amino acid incorporation into storage proteins. Assays of the lysine degradative enzyme lysine-ketoglutarate reductase in these seeds showed no co-ordinated regulation of lysine biosynthesis and catabolism during seed maturation. All transgenic plants were fertile and produced morphologically normal seeds.  相似文献   

6.
The lysine insensitive Corynebacterium glutamicum dihydrodipicolinate synthase enzyme (cDHDPS) was recently successfully introduced into maize plants to enhance the level of lysine in the grain. To better understand lysine insensitivity of the cDHDPS, we expressed, purified, kinetically characterized the protein, and solved its X-ray crystal structure. The cDHDPS enzyme has a fold and overall structure that is highly similar to other DHDPS proteins. A noteworthy feature of the active site is the evidence that the catalytic lysine residue forms a Schiff base adduct with pyruvate. Analyses of the cDHDPS structure in the vicinity of the putative binding site for S-lysine revealed that the allosteric binding site in the Escherichia coli DHDPS protein does not exist in cDHDPS due to three non-conservative amino acids substitutions, and this is likely why cDHDPS is not feedback inhibited by lysine.  相似文献   

7.
The aspartate‐derived amino acid pathway in plants is an intensively studied metabolic pathway, because of the biosynthesis of the four essential amino acids lysine, threonine, isoleucine and methionine. The pathway is mainly controlled by the key regulatory enzymes aspartate kinase (AK; EC 2.7.2.4), homoserine dehydrogenase (HSDH; EC 1.1.1.3) and 4‐hydroxy‐tetrahydrodipicolinate synthase (EC 4.3.3.7), formerly referred to as dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS). They are encoded by isoenzyme families and it is not known why such families are evolutionarily maintained. To gain more insight into the specific roles and regulation of the isoenzymes, we inhibited DHDPS in Arabidopsis thaliana with the chemical compound (N,N‐dimethylglycinatoboranyloxycarbonylmethyl)‐dimethylamine‐borane (DDAB) and compared the short‐term effects on the biochemical and biomolecular level to the long‐term adaptations in dhdps knockout mutants. We found that DHDPS2 plays a crucial role in controlling lysine biosynthesis, thereby stabilizing flux through the whole aspartate pathway. Moreover, DHDPS2 was also shown to influence the threonine level to a large extent. In addition, the lysine‐sensitive AKs, AKLYS1 and AKLYS3 control the short‐ and long‐term responses to perturbed lysine biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana.  相似文献   

8.
The nutritional quality of crop plants is determined by their content in essential amino acids provided in food for humans or in feed for monogastric animals. Amino acid composition of crop–based diets can be improved via manipulation of the properties of key enzymes of amino acid biosynthetic pathways by mutation and transformation. We focused on the aspartate-derived amino acid pathway producing four essential amino acids: lysine, threonine, isoleucine and methionine. Genes encoding aspartate kinase (AK) and dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) that operate as key genes of the aspartate pathway have been cloned from Arabidopsis. Genetic and molecular studies revealed that at least five different ak genes are represented. Some of them were characterized in terms of gene and promoter structure, developmental expression and regulatory properties. In the case of dhdps, two quite identical genes have been identified and characterized at expression level. Mutated genes encoding a fully feedback-insensitive form of the DHDPS enzyme were obtained from Nicotiana sylvestris and Arabidopsis. Several chimeric constructs harbouring this mutated allele under the control of constitutive or seed-specific promoters were transferred via Agrobacterium or biolistics in various plant species. In all cases, lines with significant increase of free lysine content were obtained in vegetative organs, but the impact of the transgene in seeds is limited due to the presence of an active catabolic enzyme, lysine ketoreductase. These results show that, although dealing with a complex, highly regulated pathway, the overexpression of a single gene encoding a feedback-insensitive form of the key enzyme DHDPS exerts a significant effect on the carbon flux through the aspartate pathway towards lysine production.  相似文献   

9.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) is critical to the production of lysine through the diaminopimelate (DAP) pathway. Elucidation of the function, regulation and structure of this key class I aldolase has been the focus of considerable study in recent years, given that the dapA gene encoding DHDPS has been found to be essential to bacteria and plants. Allosteric inhibition by lysine is observed for DHDPS from plants and some bacterial species, the latter requiring a histidine or glutamate at position 56 (Escherichia coli numbering) over a basic amino acid. Structurally, two DHDPS monomers form the active site, which binds pyruvate and (S)-aspartate β-semialdehyde, with most dimers further dimerising to form a tetrameric arrangement around a solvent-filled centre cavity. The architecture and behaviour of these dimer-of-dimers is explored in detail, including biophysical studies utilising analytical ultracentrifugation, small-angle X-ray scattering and macromolecular crystallography that show bacterial DHDPS tetramers adopt a head-to-head quaternary structure, compared to the back-to-back arrangement observed for plant DHDPS enzymes. Finally, the potential role of pyruvate in providing substrate-mediated stabilisation of DHDPS is considered.  相似文献   

10.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) is a validated antibiotic target for which a new approach to inhibitor design has been proposed: disrupting native tetramer formation by targeting the dimer–dimer interface. In this study, rational design afforded a variant of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mtb-DHDPS-A204R, with disrupted quaternary structure. X-ray crystallography (at a resolution of 2.1 Å) revealed a dimeric protein with an identical fold and active-site structure to the tetrameric wild-type enzyme. Analytical ultracentrifugation confirmed the dimeric structure in solution, yet the dimeric mutant has similar activity to the wild-type enzyme. Although the affinity for both substrates was somewhat decreased, the high catalytic competency of the enzyme was surprising in the light of previous results showing that dimeric variants of the Escherichia coli and Bacillus anthracis DHDPS enzymes have dramatically reduced activity compared to their wild-type tetrameric counterparts. These results suggest that Mtb-DHDPS-A204R is similar to the natively dimeric enzyme from Staphylococcus aureus, and highlight our incomplete understanding of the role played by oligomerisation in relating protein structure and function.  相似文献   

11.
Proteins residing at the plus and minus ends of microtubules have been thought not to communicate with each other, but recent findings on bona fide nucleation factors also regulating microtubule dynamics have challenged this notion. New work by Bouissou et al ( 2014 ) in The EMBO Journal now reveals that interplay between the nucleation factor γ‐TuRC and the plus‐end tracking protein EB1 controls mitotic spindle positioning by affecting the stability and dynamics of astral microtubules.  相似文献   

12.
Structural backbones of iron‐scavenging siderophore molecules include polyamines 1,3‐diaminopropane and 1,5‐diaminopentane (cadaverine). For the cadaverine‐based desferroxiamine E siderophore in Streptomyces coelicolor, the corresponding biosynthetic gene cluster contains an ORF encoded by desA that was suspected of producing the cadaverine (decarboxylated lysine) backbone. However, desA encodes an l ‐2,4‐diaminobutyrate decarboxylase (DABA DC) homologue and not any known form of lysine decarboxylase (LDC). The only known function of DABA DC is, together with l ‐2,4‐aminobutyrate aminotransferase (DABA AT), to synthesize 1,3‐diaminopropane. We show here that S. coelicolor desA encodes a novel LDC and we hypothesized that DABA DC homologues present in siderophore biosynthetic clusters in the absence of DABA AT ORFs would be novel LDCs. We confirmed this by correctly predicting the LDC activity of a DABA DC homologue from a Yersinia pestis siderophore biosynthetic pathway. The corollary was confirmed for a DABA DC homologue, adjacent to a DABA AT ORF in a siderophore pathway in the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis, which was shown to be a bona fide DABA DC. These findings enable prediction of whether a siderophore pathway will utilize 1,3‐diaminopropane or cadaverine, and suggest that the majority of bacteria use DABA AT and DABA DC for siderophore, rather than norspermidine/polyamine biosynthesis.  相似文献   

13.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) catalyses the first reaction of the (S)-lysine biosynthesis pathway in bacteria and plants. The hypothetical gene for dihydrodipicolinate synthase (dapA) of Thermoanaerobacter tengcongensis was found in a cluster containing several genes of the diaminopimelate lysine–synthesis pathway. The dapA gene was cloned in Escherichia coli, DHDPS was subsequently produced and purified to homogeneity. The T. tengcongensis DHDPS was found to be thermostable (T 0.5 = 3 h at 90°C). The specific condensation of pyruvate and (S)-aspartate-β -semialdehyde was catalyzed optimally at 80°C at pH 8.0. Enzyme kinetics were determined at 60°C, as close as possible to in vivo conditions. The established kinetic parameters were in the same range as for example E. coli dihydrodipicolinate synthase. The specific activity of the T. tengcongensis DHDPS was relatively high even at 30°C. Like most dihydrodipicolinate synthases known at present, the DHDPS of T. tengcongensis seems to be a tetramer. A structural model reveals that the active site is well conserved. The binding site of the allosteric inhibitor lysine appears not to be conserved, which agrees with the fact that the DHDPS of T. tengcongensis is not inhibited by lysine under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) catalyzes the first committed step of the lysine biosynthetic pathway. The tetrameric structure of DHDPS is thought to be essential for enzymatic activity, as isolated dimeric mutants of Escherichia coli DHDPS possess less than 2.5% that of the activity of the wild-type tetramer. It has recently been proposed that the dimeric form lacks activity due to increased dynamics. Tetramerization, by buttressing two dimers together, reduces dynamics in the dimeric unit and explains why all active bacterial DHDPS enzymes to date have been shown to be homo-tetrameric. However, in this study we demonstrate for the first time that DHDPS from methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) exists in a monomer-dimer equilibrium in solution. Fluorescence-detected analytical ultracentrifugation was employed to show that the dimerization dissociation constant of MRSA-DHDPS is 33 nm in the absence of substrates and 29 nm in the presence of (S)-aspartate semialdehyde (ASA), but is 20-fold tighter in the presence of the substrate pyruvate (1.6 nm). The MRSA-DHDPS dimer exhibits a ping-pong kinetic mechanism (k(cat)=70+/-2 s(-1), K(m)(Pyruvate)=0.11+/-0.01 mm, and K(m)(ASA)=0.22+/-0.02 mm) and shows ASA substrate inhibition with a K(si)(ASA) of 2.7+/-0.9 mm. We also demonstrate that unlike the E. coli tetramer, the MRSA-DHDPS dimer is insensitive to lysine inhibition. The near atomic resolution (1.45 A) crystal structure confirms the dimeric quaternary structure and reveals that the dimerization interface of the MRSA enzyme is more extensive in buried surface area and noncovalent contacts than the equivalent interface in tetrameric DHDPS enzymes from other bacterial species. These data provide a detailed mechanistic insight into DHDPS catalysis and the evolution of quaternary structure of this important bacterial enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Lysine is one of the most limiting amino acids in plants and its biosynthesis is carefully regulated through inhibition of the first committed step in the pathway catalyzed by dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS). This is mediated via a feedback mechanism involving the binding of lysine to the allosteric cleft of DHDPS. However, the precise allosteric mechanism is yet to be defined. We present a thorough enzyme kinetic and thermodynamic analysis of lysine inhibition of DHDPS from the common grapevine, Vitis vinifera (Vv). Our studies demonstrate that lysine binding is both tight (relative to bacterial DHDPS orthologs) and cooperative. The crystal structure of the enzyme bound to lysine (2.4 Å) identifies the allosteric binding site and clearly shows a conformational change of several residues within the allosteric and active sites. Molecular dynamics simulations comparing the lysine-bound (PDB ID 4HNN) and lysine free (PDB ID 3TUU) structures show that Tyr132, a key catalytic site residue, undergoes significant rotational motion upon lysine binding. This suggests proton relay through the catalytic triad is attenuated in the presence of lysine. Our study reveals for the first time the structural mechanism for allosteric inhibition of DHDPS from the common grapevine.  相似文献   

16.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS, E.C. 4.2.1.52) is a tetrameric enzyme that catalyses the first committed step of the lysine biosynthetic pathway. Dimeric variants of DHDPS have impaired catalytic activity due to aberrant protein motions within the dimer unit. Thus, it is thought that the tetrameric structure functions to restrict these motions and optimise enzyme dynamics for catalysis. Despite the importance of dimer-dimer association, the interface between subunits of each dimer is small, accounting for only 4.3% of the total monomer surface area, and the structure of the interface is not conserved across species. We have probed the tolerance of dimer-dimer association to mutation by introducing amino acid substitutions within the interface. All point mutations resulted in destabilisation of the ‘dimer of dimers’ tetrameric structure. Both the position of the mutation in the interface and the physico-chemical nature of the substitution appeared to effect tetramerisation. Despite only weak destabilisation of the tetramer by some mutations, catalytic activity was reduced to ∼10-15% of the wild-type in all cases, suggesting that the dimer-dimer interface is finely tuned to optimise function.  相似文献   

17.
In plants, the lysine biosynthetic pathway is an attractive target for both the development of herbicides and increasing the nutritional value of crops given that lysine is a limiting amino acid in cereals. Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS) and dihydrodipicolinate reductase (DHDPR) catalyse the first two committed steps of lysine biosynthesis. Here, we carry out for the first time a comprehensive characterisation of the structure and activity of both DHDPS and DHDPR from Arabidopsis thaliana. The A. thaliana DHDPS enzyme (At-DHDPS2) has similar activity to the bacterial form of the enzyme, but is more strongly allosterically inhibited by (S)-lysine. Structural studies of At-DHDPS2 show (S)-lysine bound at a cleft between two monomers, highlighting the allosteric site; however, unlike previous studies, binding is not accompanied by conformational changes, suggesting that binding may cause changes in protein dynamics rather than large conformation changes. DHDPR from A. thaliana (At-DHDPR2) has similar specificity for both NADH and NADPH during catalysis, and has tighter binding of substrate than has previously been reported. While all known bacterial DHDPR enzymes have a tetrameric structure, analytical ultracentrifugation, and scattering data unequivocally show that At-DHDPR2 exists as a dimer in solution. The exact arrangement of the dimeric protein is as yet unknown, but ab initio modelling of x-ray scattering data is consistent with an elongated structure in solution, which does not correspond to any of the possible dimeric pairings observed in the X-ray crystal structure of DHDPR from other organisms. This increased knowledge of the structure and function of plant lysine biosynthetic enzymes will aid future work aimed at improving primary production.  相似文献   

18.
All living cells are subject to agents that promote DNA damage. A particularly lethal lesion are interstrand cross‐links (ICL), a property exploited by several anti‐cancer chemotherapies. In yeast and humans, an enzyme that plays a key role in repairing such damage are the PSO2/SNM1 nucleases. Here, we report that Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of African trypanosomiasis, possesses a bona fide member of this family (called TbSNM1) with expression of the parasite enzyme able to suppress the sensitivity yeast pso2Δ mutants display towards mechlorethamine, an ICL‐inducing compound. By disrupting the Tbsnm1 gene, we demonstrate that TbSNM1 activity is non‐essential to the medically relevant T. brucei life cycle stage. However, trypanosomes lacking this enzyme are more susceptible to bi‐ and tri‐functional DNA alkylating agents with this phenotype readily complemented by ectopic expression of Tbsnm1. Genetically modified variants of the null mutant line were subsequently used to establish the anti‐parasitic mechanism of action of nitrobenzylphosphoramide mustard and aziridinyl nitrobenzamide prodrugs, compounds previously shown to possess potent trypanocidal properties while exhibiting limited toxicity to mammalian cells. This established that these agents, following activation by a parasite specific type I nitroreductase, produce metabolites that promote formation of ICLs leading to inhibition of trypanosomal growth.  相似文献   

19.
Dihydrodipicolinate synthase (DHDPS; EC4.2.1.52) catalyses the first reaction of lysine biosynthesis in plants and bacteria. Plant DHDPS enzymes are strongly inhibited by lysine (I0.5 approximately 10 microM), whereas the bacterial enzymes are less (50-fold) or insensitive to lysine inhibition. We found that plant dhdps sequences expressing lysine-sensitive DHDPS enzymes are unable to complement a bacterial auxotroph, although a functional plant DHDPS enzyme is formed. As a consequence of this, plant dhdps cDNA clones which have been isolated through functional complementation using the DHDPS-deficient Escherichia coli strain encode mutated DHDPS enzymes impaired in lysine inhibition. The experiments outlined in this article emphasize that heterologous complementation can select for mutant clones when altered protein properties are requisite for functional rescue. In addition, the mutants rescued by heterologous complementation revealed a new critical amino acid substitution which renders lysine insensitivity to the plant DHDPS enzyme. An interpretation is given for the impaired inhibition mechanism of the mutant DHDPS enzyme by integrating the identified amino acid substitution in the DHDPS protein structure.  相似文献   

20.
Among four pyruvate kinase isoenzymes, M1, M2, R and L, only M1 is considered as a nonallosteric enzyme. However, here we show that the non-phosphorylated L-type pyruvate kinase (L-PK) is also a non-allosteric enzyme with respect to its substrate phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP). The allosteric catalytic properties of L-PK are switched on through phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The non-phosphorylated enzyme was produced by expressing the rat L-PK in E. coli, as the bacterium does not have mammalian-type protein kinases. The resulting tetrameric protein was phosphorylated with a stoichiometric ratio of one mole of phosphate per one L-PK monomer. Activity of the phosphorylated enzyme was allosterically regulated by PEP with the Hill coefficient n=2.5. It was observed that allostery was engaged by phosphorylation of the first subunit in the tetrameric enzyme, while further phosphorylation only modulated this effect. The discovered switching between non-allosteric and allosteric forms of L-PK and the possibility of modulating the allostery by phosphorylation are important for understanding of the interrelationship between allostery and the regulatory phosphorylation in general, and may have implication for further analysis of glycolysis regulation in the liver.   相似文献   

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