Literature DB >> 27783504

The Remarkable Character of Porphobilinogen Synthase.

Eileen K Jaffe1.   

Abstract

Porphobilinogen synthase (n class="Gene">PBGS), also known as 5-aminolevulinate dehydratase, is an essential enzyme in the biosynthesis of all tetrapyrroles, which function in respiration, photosynthesis, and methanogenesis. Throughout evolution, PBGS adapted to a diversity of cellular niches and evolved to use an unusual variety of metal ions both for catalytic function and to control protein multimerization. With regard to the active site, some PBGSs require Zn2+; a subset of those, including human PBGS, contain a constellation of cysteine residues that acts as a sink for the environmental toxin Pb2+. PBGSs that do not require the soft metal ion Zn2+ at the active site instead are suspected of using the hard metal Mg2+. The most unexpected property of the PBGS family of enzymes is a dissociative allosteric mechanism that utilizes an equilibrium of architecturally and functionally distinct protein assemblies. The high-activity assembly is an octamer in which intersubunit interactions modulate active-site lid motion. This octamer can dissociate to dimer, the dimer can undergo a hinge twist, and the twisted dimer can assemble to a low-activity hexamer. The hexamer does not have the intersubunit interactions required to stabilize a closed conformation of the active site lid. PBGS active site chemistry benefits from a closed lid because porphobilinogen biosynthesis includes Schiff base formation, which requires deprotonated lysine amino groups. N-terminal and C-terminal sequence extensions dictate whether a specific species of PBGS can sample the hexameric assembly. The bulk of species (nearly all except animals and yeasts) use Mg2+ as an allosteric activator. Mg2+ functions allosterically by binding to an intersubunit interface that is present in the octamer but absent in the hexamer. This conformational selection allosteric mechanism is purported to be essential to avoid the untimely accumulation of phototoxic chlorophyll precursors in plants. For those PBGSs that do not use the allosteric Mg2+, there is a spatially equivalent arginine-derived guanidium group. Deprotonation of this residue promotes formation of the hexamer and accounts for the basic arm of the bell-shaped pH vs activity profile of human PBGS. A human inborn error of metabolism known as ALAD porphyria is attributed to PBGS variants that favor the hexameric assembly. The existence of one such variant, F12L, which dramatically stabilizes the human PBGS hexamer, allowed crystal structure determination for the hexamer. Without this crystal structure and octameric PBGS structures containing the allosteric Mg2+, it would have been difficult to decipher the structural basis for PBGS allostery. The requirement for multimer dissociation as an intermediate step in PBGS allostery was established by monitoring subunit disproportionation during the turnover-dependent transition of heteromeric PBGS (comprised of human wild type and F12L) from hexamer to octamer. One outcome of these studies was the definition of the dissociative morpheein model of protein allostery. The phylogenetically variable time scales for PBGS multimer interconversion result in atypical kinetic and biophysical behaviors. These behaviors can serve to identify other proteins that use the morpheein model of protein allostery.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27783504      PMCID: PMC5148690          DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00414

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  37 in total

1.  ALAD porphyria is a conformational disease.

Authors:  Eileen K Jaffe; Linda Stith
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2006-12-21       Impact factor: 11.025

Review 2.  Lessons from zinc-binding peptides.

Authors:  J M Berg; H A Godwin
Journal:  Annu Rev Biophys Biomol Struct       Date:  1997

3.  High resolution crystal structure of a Mg2+-dependent porphobilinogen synthase.

Authors:  N Frankenberg; P T Erskine; J B Cooper; P M Shoolingin-Jordan; D Jahn; D W Heinz
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  1999-06-11       Impact factor: 5.469

4.  Porphobilinogen synthase from pea: expression from an artificial gene, kinetic characterization, and novel implications for subunit interactions.

Authors:  J Kervinen; R L Dunbrack; S Litwin; J Martins; R C Scarrow; M Volin; A T Yeung; E Yoon; E K Jaffe
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2000-08-01       Impact factor: 3.162

5.  The molecular mechanism of lead inhibition of human porphobilinogen synthase.

Authors:  E K Jaffe; J Martins; J Li; J Kervinen; R L Dunbrack
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2001-01-12       Impact factor: 5.157

6.  An unusual phylogenetic variation in the metal ion binding sites of porphobilinogen synthase.

Authors:  Eileen K Jaffe
Journal:  Chem Biol       Date:  2003-01

7.  Kinetics and thermodynamics of the interchange of the morpheein forms of human porphobilinogen synthase.

Authors:  Trevor Selwood; Lei Tang; Sarah H Lawrence; Yana Anokhina; Eileen K Jaffe
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2008-02-14       Impact factor: 3.162

8.  Characterization of the role of the stimulatory magnesium of Escherichia coli porphobilinogen synthase.

Authors:  E K Jaffe; S Ali; L W Mitchell; K M Taylor; M Volin; G D Markham
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  1995-01-10       Impact factor: 3.162

9.  A structural basis for half-of-the-sites metal binding revealed in Drosophila melanogaster porphobilinogen synthase.

Authors:  Lenka Kundrat; Jacob Martins; Linda Stith; Roland L Dunbrack; Eileen K Jaffe
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2003-06-06       Impact factor: 5.157

10.  Purification of a 38-kDa protein from rabbit reticulocyte lysate which promotes protein renaturation by heat shock protein 70 and its identification as delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase and as a putative DnaJ protein.

Authors:  M Gross; S Hessefort; A Olin
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1999-01-29       Impact factor: 5.157

View more
  9 in total

Review 1.  Porphobilinogen synthase: An equilibrium of different assemblies in human health.

Authors:  Eileen K Jaffe
Journal:  Prog Mol Biol Transl Sci       Date:  2019-12-06       Impact factor: 3.622

2.  In silico Studies on the Interaction between Mpro and PLpro From SARS-CoV-2 and Ebselen, its Metabolites and Derivatives.

Authors:  Pablo Andrei Nogara; Folorunsho Bright Omage; Gustavo Roni Bolzan; Cássia Pereira Delgado; Michael Aschner; Laura Orian; João Batista Teixeira Rocha
Journal:  Mol Inform       Date:  2021-05-21       Impact factor: 4.050

3.  Identification and characterization of levulinyl-CoA synthetase from Pseudomonas citronellolis, which differs phylogenetically from LvaE of Pseudomonas putida.

Authors:  Hiroshi Habe; Hideaki Koike; Yuya Sato; Yosuke Iimura; Tomoyuki Hori; Manabu Kanno; Nobutada Kimura; Kohtaro Kirimura
Journal:  AMB Express       Date:  2019-08-13       Impact factor: 3.298

4.  Response of photosynthesis to different concentrations of heavy metals in Davidia involucrata.

Authors:  Yan Yang; Liuqing Zhang; Xing Huang; Yiyang Zhou; Qiumei Quan; Yunxiang Li; Xiaohua Zhu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-03-16       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 5.  Wrangling Shape-Shifting Morpheeins to Tackle Disease and Approach Drug Discovery.

Authors:  Eileen K Jaffe
Journal:  Front Mol Biosci       Date:  2020-11-27

6.  Heme biosynthesis depends on previously unrecognized acquisition of iron-sulfur cofactors in human amino-levulinic acid dehydratase.

Authors:  Gang Liu; Debangsu Sil; Nunziata Maio; Wing-Hang Tong; J Martin Bollinger; Carsten Krebs; Tracey Ann Rouault
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-12-09       Impact factor: 14.919

7.  Plasmodium falciparum hydroxymethylbilane synthase does not house any cosynthase activity within the haem biosynthetic pathway.

Authors:  Alan F Scott; Evelyne Deery; Andrew D Lawrence; Martin J Warren
Journal:  Microbiology (Reading)       Date:  2021-10       Impact factor: 2.777

8.  Towards Initial Indications for a Thiol-Based Redox Control of Arabidopsis 5-Aminolevulinic Acid Dehydratase.

Authors:  Daniel Wittmann; Sigri Kløve; Peng Wang; Bernhard Grimm
Journal:  Antioxidants (Basel)       Date:  2018-10-31

9.  In Silico Exploration of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Metabolic Networks Shows Host-Associated Convergent Fluxomic Phenotypes.

Authors:  Guillem Santamaria; Paula Ruiz-Rodriguez; Chantal Renau-Mínguez; Francisco R Pinto; Mireia Coscollá
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2022-02-28
  9 in total

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