Abstract

Kinetic parameters (kcat and Km) derived from the Michaelis–Menten equation are widely used to characterize enzymes. kcat/Km is considered the catalytic efficiency or substrate specificity of an enzyme toward its substrate. N-Myristoyltransferases (NMTs) catalyze the N-terminal glycine myristoylation of numerous eukaryotic proteins. Surprisingly, we find that in vitro human NMT1 can accept acetyl-CoA and catalyze acetylation with kcat and Km values similar to that of myristoylation. However, when both acetyl-CoA and myristoyl-CoA are present in the reaction, NMT1 catalyzes almost exclusively myristoylation. This phenomenon is caused by the dramatically different binding affinities of NMT1 for myristoyl-CoA and acetyl-CoA (estimated Kd of 14.7 nM and 10.1 μM, respectively). When both are present, NMT1 is essentially entirely bound by myristoyl-CoA and thus catalyzes myristoylation exclusively. The NMT1 example highlights the crucial role of binding affinity in determining the substrate specificity of enzymes, which in contrast to the traditionally held view in enzymology that the substrate specificity is defined by kcat/Km values. This understanding readily explains the vast biological literature showing the coimmunoprecipitation of enzyme–substrate pairs for enzymes that catalyzes protein post-translational modifications (PTM), including phosphorylation, acetylation, and ubiquitination. Furthermore, this understanding allows the discovery of substrate proteins by identifying the interacting proteins of PTM enzymes, which we demonstrate by identifying three previously unknown substrate proteins (LRATD1, LRATD2, and ERICH5) of human NMT1/2 by mining available interactome data.

Highlights

  • Kinetic parameters derived from the Michaelis−Menten equation are widely used to characterize enzymes. kcat/Km is considered the catalytic efficiency or substrate specificity of an enzyme toward its substrate

  • The N-myristoyltransferase 1 (NMT1) example highlights the crucial role of binding affinity in determining the substrate specificity of enzymes, which in contrast to the traditionally held view in enzymology that the substrate specificity is defined by kcat/Km values

  • While studying human N-myristoyltransferase 1 (NMT1), we unexpectedly discovered that NMT1 shows a drastically different preference for two substrates with similar kcat/Km values, leading to the turnover of only one of the substrates when both were present in the reaction

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Summary

Introduction

Kinetic parameters (kcat and Km) derived from the Michaelis−Menten equation are widely used to characterize enzymes. kcat/Km is considered the catalytic efficiency or substrate specificity of an enzyme toward its substrate. ■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION NMT1 Catalyzes Myristoylation and Acetylation of ARF6 Peptide with Similar kcat/Km Values in Vitro. Pubs.acs.org/acscatalysis hypothesized that in vivo, NMT1 could still predominately catalyze myrisotylation as long as the kcat/Km value for myristoyl-CoA is much higher than that of acetyl-CoA.

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