Publication View

The integral membrane enzyme PagP alternates between two dynamically distinct states

Abstract
PhoPQ-activated gene P (PagP) is an integral membrane enzyme that transfers the sn-1 palmitate chain from phospholipid to lipopolysaccharide in Gram-negative bacteria. A recent x-ray crystallographic study established that the sn-1 palmitate binds within a long cavity at the center of the PagP β barrel. The high mobility required to permit substrate entry into the central core of the barrel contrasts with the need to assemble a well defined structure in the peripheral loops, where many key catalytic residues are located. To gain insight into how dynamics relate to the function of PagP, the enzyme was reconstituted into CYFOS-7, a detergent that supports enzymatic activity. Under these conditions, PagP exists in equilibrium between two states, relaxed (R) and tense (T). The kinetics and thermodynamics of the interchange have been investigated by 1H-15N NMR spectroscopy, with ΔH = -10.7 kcal/mol and ΔS = -37.5 cal/mol·K for the R→ T transition. A comparison of chemical shifts between the two states indicates that major structural changes occur in the large extracellular L1 loop and adjacent regions of the β barrel. In addition to the R,T interconversion, other conformational exchange processes are observed in the R state, showing it to be quite flexible. Thus a picture emerges in which substrate entry is facilitated by the mobility of the R state, whereas the relatively rigid T state adopts a radically different conformation in a region of the protein known to be essential for catalysis. The ability to switch between dynamically distinct states may be a key feature of the catalytic cycle of PagP.

Publication details
Download http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=470724
Publisher National Academy of Sciences
Repository PubMed Central (PMC3 - NLM DTD) (United States)
Keywords Biological Sciences
Type Text
Language Englisch

Publications citing this publication (1)
Three Hydrolases and a Transferase: Comparative Analysis of Active-site Dynamics via the BioSimGrid Database (2006)