Abstract

Phosphoryl transfer reactions figure prominently in energy metabolism, signaling, transport and motility. Prior detailed studies of selected systems have highlighted mechanistic features that distinguish different phosphoryl transfer enzymes. Here, a top-down approach is developed for comparing statistically the active site configurations between populations of diverse structures in the Protein Data Bank, and it reveals patterns of hydrogen bonding that transcend enzyme families. Through analysis of large samples of structures, insights are drawn at a level of detail exceeding the experimental precision of an individual structure. In phosphagen kinases, for example, hydrogen bonds with the O3β of the nucleotide substrate are revealed as analogous to those in unrelated G proteins. In G proteins and other enzymes, interactions with O3β have been understood in terms of electrostatic favoring of the transition state. Ground state quantum mechanical calculations on model compounds show that the active site interactions highlighted in our database analysis can affect substrate phosphate charge and bond length, in ways that are consistent with prior experimental observations, by modulating hyperconjugative orbital interactions that weaken the scissile bond. Testing experimentally the inference about the importance of O3β interactions in phosphagen kinases, mutation of arginine kinase Arg280 decreases kcat, as predicted, with little impact upon KM.

Highlights

  • Enzymes that catalyze the transfer of a phosphate from ATP are widespread in biology

  • One is struck by the diversity in mechanistic proposals and the lack of consensus on key characteristics of active sites that might implicate common elements of mechanism that might bridge across diverse enzyme families

  • The numbers of interactions were compared between phosphoryl transfer enzymes (Figure 1a) and two comparison groups (Figure 1b, c) to distinguish potentially catalytic from noncatalytic associations

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Summary

Introduction

Enzymes that catalyze the transfer of a phosphate from ATP are widespread in biology. The analysis is put to brief experimental test through kinetic analysis of an active site mutant affecting interactions with the bridging b-oxygen in the reaction of arginine kinase, an enzyme in which such interactions had not previously been implicated.

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