Identification of Regions of Rabbit Muscle Pyruvate
Kinase Important for Allosteric Regulation by Phenylalanine, Detected
by H/D Exchange Mass Spectrometry
posted on 2013-03-19, 00:00authored byCharulata
B. Prasannan, Maria T. Villar, Antonio Artigues, Aron W. Fenton
Mass spectrometry has been used to
determine the number of exchangeable
backbone amide protons and the associated rate constants that are
altered when rabbit muscle pyruvate kinase (rM1-PYK) binds
either the allosteric inhibitor (phenylalanine) or a nonallosteric
analogue of the inhibitor. Alanine is used as the nonallosteric analogue
because it binds competitively with phenylalanine but elicits a negligible
allosteric inhibition, i.e., a negligible reduction in the affinity
of rM1-PYK for the substrate, phosphoenolpyruvate. This
experimental design is expected to distinguish changes in the protein
caused by effector binding (i.e., those changes common upon the addition
of alanine vs phenylalanine) from changes associated with allosteric
regulation (i.e., those elicited by the addition of phenylalanine
binding, but not alanine binding). High-quality peptic fragments covering
98% of the protein were identified. Changes in both the number of
exchangeable protons per peptide and in the rate constant associated
with exchange highlight regions of the protein with allosteric roles.
The set of allosterically relevant peptides identified by this technique
includes residues previously identified by mutagenesis to have roles
in allosteric regulation by phenylalanine.