Literature DB >> 12680779

Linkage between fructose 1,6-bisphosphate binding and the dimer-tetramer equilibrium of Escherichia coli glycerol kinase: critical behavior arising from change of ligand stoichiometry.

Peng Yu1, Donald W Pettigrew.   

Abstract

Escherichia coli glycerol kinase (EC 2.7.1.30; ATP-glycerol 3-phosphotransferase) is inhibited allosterically by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP), and this inhibition is a primary mechanism by which glucose controls glycerol utilization in vivo. Earlier work indicates that glycerol kinase displays a dimer-tetramer equilibrium in solution, FBP shifts the equilibrium toward the tetramer, and tetramer formation is required for FBP inhibition. However, equilibrium constants for FBP binding and dimer-tetramer assembly that describe the linkage between these processes are unknown. Here, decreased fluorescence anisotropy of extrinsic fluorophores fluorescein and 2',7'-difluorofluorescein due to homo fluorescence resonance energy transfer (homo-FRET) is used to quantitate tetramer assembly and FBP binding. Glycerol kinase is labeled with extrinsic fluorophores covalently attached to an engineered surface cysteine residue under conditions that prevent labeling of native cysteine residues. Tryptic peptide mapping and MALDI-MS verify labeling at the engineered site only. Initial velocity studies show the labeling does not alter the catalytic properties or FBP inhibition. The steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of enzyme with a labeling stoichiometry of approximately 0.1 mol of fluorophore/mol of subunit is not sensitive to increased protein concentration or binding of FBP, indicating the absence of homo-FRET. However, steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of enzyme with a labeling stoichiometry of approximately 0.4 mol of fluorophore/mol of subunit decreases with increasing protein concentration, which is consistent with depolarization due to homo-FRET. The protein concentration dependence of the decreased fluorescence anisotropy is described by a dimer-tetramer equilibrium with an apparent dissociation constant of 61 +/- 7 nM (subunits) at pH 7.0 and 25 degrees C. FBP binds to both the dimer and tetramer of glycerol kinase, and the FBP concentration dependence of the apparent dissociation constant for the dimer-tetramer equilibrium shows critical behavior. The apparent dissociation constant decreases and then increases with increasing FBP concentration, reaching a minimum at about 20 mM FBP. Critical behavior is seen also in the FBP dependence of the inhibition. The critical behavior arises because tetramer dissociation increases FBP stoichiometry from two sites per tetramer to four half-sites per two dimers. The phenomenological description of the coupling between tetramer assembly and FBP binding shows antagonistic binding of FBP to the two sites on the tetramer, indicating that the strong positive cooperativity observed for FBP inhibition of catalytic activity (Hill coefficient approximately 1.5) is due to the approximately 4000-fold higher affinity of the tetramer for FBP rather than to positive coupling between the two FBP sites.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12680779     DOI: 10.1021/bi027142l

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  6 in total

1.  Functional and metabolic effects of adaptive glycerol kinase (GLPK) mutants in Escherichia coli.

Authors:  M Kenyon Applebee; Andrew R Joyce; Tom M Conrad; Donald W Pettigrew; Bernhard Ø Palsson
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2011-05-06       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 2.  The bacterial phosphoenolpyruvate:carbohydrate phosphotransferase system: regulation by protein phosphorylation and phosphorylation-dependent protein-protein interactions.

Authors:  Josef Deutscher; Francine Moussan Désirée Aké; Meriem Derkaoui; Arthur Constant Zébré; Thanh Nguyen Cao; Houda Bouraoui; Takfarinas Kentache; Abdelhamid Mokhtari; Eliane Milohanic; Philippe Joyet
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 11.056

Review 3.  What Mutagenesis Can and Cannot Reveal About Allostery.

Authors:  Gerald M Carlson; Aron W Fenton
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2016-05-10       Impact factor: 4.033

4.  Conserved family of glycerol kinase loci in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Julian A Martinez Agosto; Edward R B McCabe
Journal:  Mol Genet Metab       Date:  2006-03-20       Impact factor: 4.797

5.  Oligomeric interactions provide alternatives to direct steric modes of control of sugar kinase/actin/hsp70 superfamily functions by heterotropic allosteric effectors: inhibition of E. coli glycerol kinase.

Authors:  Donald W Pettigrew
Journal:  Arch Biochem Biophys       Date:  2009-10-09       Impact factor: 4.013

6.  Elucidation of the co-metabolism of glycerol and glucose in Escherichia coli by genetic engineering, transcription profiling, and (13)C metabolic flux analysis.

Authors:  Ruilian Yao; Dewang Xiong; Hongbo Hu; Masataka Wakayama; Wenjuan Yu; Xuehong Zhang; Kazuyuki Shimizu
Journal:  Biotechnol Biofuels       Date:  2016-08-22       Impact factor: 6.040

  6 in total

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