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The kinetic mechanism of the human bifunctional enzyme ATIC (5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide ribonucleotide transformylase/inosine 5'-monophosphate cyclohydrolase). A surprising lack of substrate channeling
Authors:Bulock Karen G  Beardsley G Peter  Anderson Karen S
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA.
Abstract:5-Amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide ribonucleotide transformylase/IMP cyclohydrolase (ATIC) is a bifunctional protein possessing two enzymatic activities that sequentially catalyze the last two steps in the pathway for de novo synthesis of inosine 5'-monophosphate. This bifunctional enzyme is of particular interest because of its potential as a chemotherapeutic target. Furthermore, these two catalytic activities reside on the same protein throughout all of nature, raising the question of whether there is some kinetic advantage to the bifunctionality. Rapid chemical quench, stopped-flow absorbance, and steady-state kinetic techniques were used to elucidate the complete kinetic mechanism of human ATIC. The kinetic simulation program KINSIM was used to model the kinetic data obtained in this study. The detailed kinetic analysis, in combination with kinetic simulations, provided the following key features of the enzyme reaction pathway. 1) The rate-limiting step in the overall reaction (2.9 +/- 0.4 s(-1)) is likely the release of tetrahydrofolate from the formyltransferase active site or a conformational change associated with tetrahydrofolate release. 2) The rate of the reverse transformylase reaction (6.7 s(-1)) is approximately 2-3-fold faster than the forward rate (2.9 s(-1)), whereas the cyclohydrolase reaction is essentially unidirectional in the forward sense. The cyclohydrolase reaction thus draws the overall bifunctional reaction toward the production of inosine monophosphate. 3) There was no kinetic evidence of substrate channeling of the intermediate, the formylaminoimidazole carboxamide ribonucleotide, between the formyltransferase and the cyclohydrolase active sites.
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