Abstract

Crystal structures of two bacterial metal (Zn2+)-dependent d-fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) aldolases in complex with substrate, analogues, and triose-P reaction products were determined to 1.5-2.0 Å resolution. The ligand complexes cryotrapped in native or mutant Helicobacter pylori aldolase crystals enabled a novel mechanistic description of FBP C3-C4 bond cleavage. The reaction mechanism uses active site remodeling during the catalytic cycle, implicating relocation of the Zn2+ cofactor that is mediated by conformational changes of active site loops. Substrate binding initiates conformational changes triggered upon P1 phosphate binding, which liberates the Zn2+-chelating His-180, allowing it to act as a general base for the proton abstraction at the FBP C4 hydroxyl group. A second zinc-chelating His-83 hydrogen bonds the substrate C4 hydroxyl group and assists cleavage by stabilizing the developing negative charge during proton abstraction. Cleavage is concerted with relocation of the metal cofactor from an interior to a surface-exposed site, thereby stabilizing the nascent enediolate form. Conserved residue Glu-142 is essential for protonation of the enediolate form prior to product release. A d-tagatose 1,6-bisphosphate enzymatic complex reveals how His-180-mediated proton abstraction controls stereospecificity of the cleavage reaction. Recognition and discrimination of the reaction products, dihydroxyacetone-P and d-glyceraldehyde 3-P, occurs via charged hydrogen bonds between hydroxyl groups of the triose-Ps and conserved residues, Asp-82 and Asp-255, respectively, and are crucial aspects of the enzyme's role in gluconeogenesis. Conformational changes in mobile loops β5-α7 and β6-α8 (containing catalytic residues Glu-142 and His-180, respectively) drive active site remodeling, enabling the relocation of the metal cofactor.

Highlights

  • Crystal structures of two bacterial metal (Zn2؉)– dependent D-fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) aldolases in complex with substrate, analogues, and triose-P reaction products were determined to 1.5–2.0 Aresolution

  • Size exclusion chromatography corroborated the dimeric quaternary structure of H. pylori aldolase, which elutes at a relative molecular mass of 70 kDa

  • The role of Asp-82 was investigated in the D82N variant of H. pylori aldolase using a combination of FBP cleavage activity and structure determination of D82N variant crystals soaked with substrates

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Summary

Results

H. pylori FBP aldolase polypeptide exhibited a (␤␣)8-barrel (or triose-phosphate isomerase (TIM) barrel) fold as described previously [26]. The observed electron density map corresponded to a day-long incubation at saturating concentrations of FBP that revealed only triose-Ps trapped in the active site This interpretation was supported by occupancy refinement of DHAP and G3P to respective values of 0.7 and 0.6 and by B-factor similarity of the triose-Ps with contacting residues. Superposition of the HBP-soaked structure from E. coli apoenzyme with either structures of the E. coli holoenzyme–DHAP complex therein (r.m.s.d., 0.27 Å), the G. lamblia holoenzyme–TBP complex (r.m.s.d., 1.3 Å), or complexes of the M. tuberculosis holoenzyme with triose-Ps (DHAP/G3P) and FBP (r.m.s.d. values of 0.82 and 0.81 Å, respectively) shows identical binding loci for phosphate oxyanions and homologous hydroxyl groups in the active site even though in the holoenzyme structures the active site ligand and the metal cofactor interact [22, 23].

20 Ϯ 1 100 Ϯ 20 13 Ϯ 2 ND ND
Discussion
Experimental procedures
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