Mitochondrial creatine kinases are key players in maintaining energy homeostasis in cells by working in conjunction with cytosolic creatine kinases for energy transport from mitochondria to cytoplasm. High levels of MtCK observed in Her2+ breast cancer and inhibition of breast cancer cell growth by substrate analog, cyclocreatine, indicate dependence of cancer cells on the 'energy shuttle' for cell growth and survival. Hence, understanding the key mechanistic features of creatine kinases and their inhibition plays an important role in the development of cancer therapeutics. Herein, we present the mutational and structural investigation on understudied ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase (uMtCK). Our cryo-EM structures and biochemical data on uMtCK showed closure of the loop comprising residue His61 is specific to and relies on creatine binding and the reaction mechanism of phosphoryl transfer depends on electrostatics in the active site. In addition, the previously identified covalent inhibitor CKi showed inhibition in breast cancer BT474 cells, however our biochemical and structural data indicated that CKi is not a potent inhibitor for breast cancer due to strong dependency on the covalent link formation and inability to induce conformational changes upon binding.
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