4.4 Article

Enabling Role of Ligand-Driven Conformational Changes in Enzyme Evolution

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 61, Issue 15, Pages 1533-1542

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00178

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM39754, GM116921, GM134881]

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Many enzymes use substrate binding energy to drive protein conformational changes and form stable substrate complexes. The evolution of these enzymes involves the selection of variants with destabilizing substitutions that enhance binding interactions with the substrate. Enzymes that incorporate conformational changes have a significant evolutionary advantage and enable the rapid propagation of enzyme activities.
Many enzymes that show a large specificity in binding the enzymatic transition state with a higher affinity than the substrate utilize substrate binding energy to drive protein conformational changes to form caged substrate complexes. These protein cages provide strong stabilization of enzymatic transition states. Using part of the substrate binding energy to drive the protein conformational change avoids a similar strong stabilization of the Michaelis complex and irreversible ligand binding. A seminal step in the development of modern enzyme catalysts was the evolution of enzymes that couple substrate binding to a conformational change. These include enzymes that function in glycolysis (triosephosphate isomerase), the biosynthesis of lipids (glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase), the hexose monophosphate shunt (6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase), and the mevalonate pathway (isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase), catalyze the final step in the biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides (orotidine monophosphate decarboxylase), and regulate the cellular levels of adenine nucleotides (adenylate kinase). The evolution of enzymes that undergo ligand-driven conformational changes to form active protein-substrate cages is proposed to proceed by selection of variants, in which the selected side chain substitutions destabilize a second protein conformer that shows compensating enhanced binding interactions with the substrate. The advantages inherent to enzymes that incorporate a conformational change into the catalytic cycle provide a strong driving force for the evolution of flexible protein folds such as the TIM barrel. The appearance of these folds represented a watershed event in enzyme evolution that enabled the rapid propagation of enzyme activities within enzyme superfamilies.

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