posted on 2023-10-09, 17:35authored byYacoba
V. T. Minnow, Vern L. Schramm, Steven C. Almo, Agnidipta Ghosh
Purine nucleoside phosphorylases (PNPs) catalyze the
phosphorolysis
of 6-oxypurine nucleosides with an HPO42– dianion nucleophile. Nucleosides and phosphate occupy distinct pockets
in the PNP active site. Evaluation of the HPO42– site by mutagenesis, cooperative binding studies, and thermodynamic
and structural analysis demonstrate that alterations in the HPO42– binding site can render PNP inactive
and significantly impact subunit cooperativity and binding to transition-state
analogue inhibitors. Cooperative interactions between the cationic
transition-state analogue and the anionic HPO42– nucleophile demonstrate the importance of reforming the transition-state
ensemble for optimal inhibition with transition-state analogues. Altered
phosphate binding in the catalytic site mutants helps to explain one
of the known lethal PNP deficiency syndromes in humans.