Abstract

Mammalian glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) is a homohexameric enzyme that catalyzes the reversible oxidative deamination of l-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate using NAD(P)(+) as coenzyme. Unlike its counterparts from other animal kingdoms, mammalian GDH is regulated by a host of ligands. The recently discovered hyperinsulinism/hyperammonemia disorder showed that the loss of allosteric inhibition of GDH by GTP causes excessive secretion of insulin. Subsequent studies demonstrated that wild-type and hyperinsulinemia/hyperammonemia forms of GDH are inhibited by the green tea polyphenols, epigallocatechin gallate and epicatechin gallate. This was followed by high throughput studies that identified more stable inhibitors, including hexachlorophene, GW5074, and bithionol. Shown here are the structures of GDH complexed with these three compounds. Hexachlorophene forms a ring around the internal cavity in GDH through aromatic stacking interactions between the drug and GDH as well as between the drug molecules themselves. In contrast, GW5074 and bithionol both bind as pairs of stacked compounds at hexameric 2-fold axes between the dimers of subunits. The internal core of GDH contracts when the catalytic cleft closes during enzymatic turnover. None of the drugs cause conformational changes in the contact residues, but all bind to key interfaces involved in this contraction process. Therefore, it seems likely that the drugs inhibit enzymatic turnover by inhibiting this transition. Indeed, this expansion/contraction process may play a major role in the inter-subunit communication and allosteric regulation observed in GDH.

Highlights

  • Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH)2 is found in all living organisms and catalyzes the reversible oxidative deamination of L-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate using NAD(P)ϩ as coenzyme [1]

  • ADP is an activator of GDH [3, 6, 10, 11, 14] that acts in an opposite manner to GTP by facilitating product release

  • Leucine is a poor substrate for GDH but is an allosteric activator for the enzyme [8]

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Summary

Novel Inhibitors Complexed with Glutamate Dehydrogenase

During glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in normal individuals, it has been proposed that the generation of high energy phosphates inhibits GDH and promotes conversion of glutamate to glutamine, which, alone or combined, might amplify the release of insulin [29, 30] Further support for this contention came from studies on the inhibitory effects of the polyphenolic compounds from green tea on BCH-stimulated insulin secretion [31]. Bithionol and GW5074 bind as pairs between dimers of GDH subunits further away from the core of the enzyme None of these compounds induce significant conformational changes in their immediate vicinity, and the mechanism of action is not clear from the location of their binding sites. Inhibition is likely due interference with this “breathing” process

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
Km ϩ
Tetrahymena was cultured in SSP
Vmax and
Unique reflections
DISCUSSION
Findings
Hill coefficient
Full Text
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