| Literature DB >> 32682077 |
Taylor N Dennis1, Nikola Kenjić1, Amrik S Kang1, Jonathan D Lowenson2, Jay S Kirkwood3, Steven G Clarke2, J Jefferson P Perry4.
Abstract
Metabolite damage control is a critical but poorly defined aspect of cellular biochemistry, which likely involves many of the so far functionally uncharacterized protein domain (domains of unknown function; DUFs). We have determined the crystal structure of the human DUF89 protein product of the C6ORF211 gene to 1.85 Å. The crystal structure shows that the protein contains a core α-β-α fold with an active site-bound metal ion and α-helical bundle N-terminal cap, which are both conserved features of subfamily III DUF89 domains. The biochemical activities of the human protein are conserved with those of a previously characterized budding yeast homolog, where an in vitro phosphatase activity is supported by divalent cations that include Co2+, Ni2+, Mn2+ or Mg2+. Full steady-state kinetics parameters of human DUF89 using a standard PNPP phosphatase assay revealed a six times higher catalytic efficiency in presence of Co2+ compared to Mg2+. The human enzyme targets a number of phosphate substrates similar to the budding yeast homolog, while it lacks a previously indicated methyltransferase activity. The highest activity on substrate was observed with fructose-1-phosphate, a potent glycating agent, and thus human DUF89 phosphatase activity may also play a role in limiting the buildup of phospho-glycan species and their related damaged metabolites.Entities:
Keywords: ARMT1; C6ORF211; DUF89; Glycation; Metabolite repair; Phosphatase
Year: 2020 PMID: 32682077 DOI: 10.1016/j.jsb.2020.107576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Struct Biol ISSN: 1047-8477 Impact factor: 2.867