Glycerol-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase: The K120 and K204
Side Chains Define an Oxyanion Hole at the Enzyme Active Site
Posted on 2022-05-03 - 12:09
The cationic K120
and K204 side chains lie close to the C-2 carbonyl
group of substrate dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) at the active
site of glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH), and the K120 side
chain is also positioned to form a hydrogen bond to the C-1 hydroxyl
of DHAP. The kinetic parameters for unactivated and phosphite dianion-activated
GPDH-catalyzed reduction of glycolaldehyde and acetaldehyde (AcA)
show that the transition state for the former reaction is stabilized
by ca 5 kcal/mole by interactions of the C-1 hydroxyl
group with the protein catalyst. The K120A and K204A substitutions
at wild-type GPDH result in similar decreases in kcat, but Km is only affected
by the K120A substitution. These results are consistent with 3 kcal/mol
stabilizing interactions between the K120 or K204 side chains and
a negative charge at the C-2 oxygen at the transition state for hydride
transfer from NADH to DHAP. This stabilization resembles that observed
at oxyanion holes for other enzymes. There is no detectable rescue
of the K204A variant by ethylammonium cation (EtNH3+), compared with the efficient rescue of the K120A variant.
This is consistent with a difference in the accessibility of the variant
enzyme active sites to exogenous EtNH3+. The
K120A/K204A substitutions cause a (6 × 106)-fold increase
in the promiscuity of wild-type hlGPDH for catalysis
of the reduction of AcA compared to DHAP. This may reflect conservation
of the active site for an ancestral alcohol dehydrogenase, whose relative
activity for catalysis of reduction of AcA increases with substitutions
that reduce the activity for reduction of the specific substrate DHAP.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Cristobal, Judith
R.; Richard, John P. (2022). Glycerol-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase: The K120 and K204
Side Chains Define an Oxyanion Hole at the Enzyme Active Site. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00053