A Single Deoxynucleoside Kinase Variant from Drosophila melanogaster Synthesizes Monophosphates of Nucleosides
That Are Components of an Expanded Genetic System
posted on 2016-12-09, 13:49authored byMariko
F. Matsuura, Christian B. Winiger, Ryan W. Shaw, Myong-Jung Kim, Myong-Sang Kim, Ashley B. Daugherty, Fei Chen, Patricia Moussatche, Jennifer D. Moses, Stefan Lutz, Steven A. Benner
Deoxynucleoside kinase
from D. melanogaster (DmdNK)
has broad specificity; although it catalyzes
the phosphorylation of natural pyrimidine more efficiently than natural
purine nucleosides, it accepts all four 2′-deoxynucleosides
and many analogues, using ATP as a phosphate donor to give the corresponding
deoxynucleoside monophosphates. Here, we show that replacing a single
amino acid (glutamine 81 by glutamate) in DmdNK creates
a variant that also catalyzes the phosphorylation of nucleosides that
form part of an artificially expanded genetic information system (AEGIS).
By shuffling hydrogen bonding groups on the nucleobases, AEGIS adds
potentially as many as four additional nucleobase pairs to the genetic
“alphabet”. Specifically, we show that DmdNK Q81E creates the monophosphates from the AEGIS nucleosides dP, dZ, dX, and dK (respectively
2-amino-8-(1′-β-d-2′-deoxyribofuranosyl)-imidazo[1,2-a]-1,3,5-triazin-4(8H)-one, dP; 6-amino-3-(1′-β-d-2′-deoxyribofuranosyl)-5-nitro-1H-pyridin-2-one, dZ; 8-(1′β-d-2′-deoxy-ribofuranosyl)imidazo[1,2-a]-1,3,5-triazine-2(8H)-4(3H)-dione,
dX; and 2,4-diamino-5-(1′-β-d-2′-deoxyribofuranosyl)-pyrimidine,
dK). Using a coupled enzyme assay, in vitro kinetic parameters were obtained for three of these nucleosides
(dP, dX, and dK; the UV absorbance
of dZ made it impossible to get its precise kinetic parameters).
Thus, DmdNK Q81E appears to be a suitable enzyme
to catalyze the first step in the biosynthesis of AEGIS 2′-deoxynucleoside
triphosphates in vitro and, perhaps, in vivo, in a cell able to manage plasmids containing AEGIS DNA.