Abstract

The main problem for enzymes from psychrophilic species, which need to work near the freezing point of liquid water, is the exponential decay of reaction rates as the temperature is decreased. Cold-adapted enzymes have solved this problem by shifting the activation enthalpy-entropy balance for the catalyzed reaction compared to those of their mesophilic orthologs. To understand the structural basis of this universal feature, it is necessary to examine pairs of such orthologous enzymes, with known three-dimensional structures, at the microscopic level. Here, we use molecular dynamics free energy calculations in combination with the empirical valence bond method to evaluate the temperature dependence of the activation free energy for differently adapted triosephosphate isomerases. The results show that the enzyme from the psychrophilic bacterium Vibrio marinus indeed displays the characteristic shift in enthalpy-entropy balance, compared to that of the yeast ortholog. The origin of this effect is found to be located in a few surface-exposed protein loops that show differential mobilities in the two enzymes. Key mutations render these loops more mobile in the cold-adapted triosephosphate isomerase, which explains both the reduced activation enthalpy contribution from the protein surface and the lower thermostability.

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