Allosteric regulation of type I hexokinase: A site-directed mutational study indicating location of the functional glucose 6-phosphate binding site in the N-terminal half of the enzyme.
The Type I isozyme of mammalian hexokinase has evolved by a gene duplication-fusion mechanism, with resulting internal duplication of sequence and ligand binding sites. However, 1:1 binding stoichiometry indicates that only one of these is available for binding the product inhibitor, Glc-6-P; the location of that site, in the N- or C-terminal half, remains under debate. Recent structural studies (Aleshin et al., Structure 6, 39-50, 1998; Mulichak et al., Nature Struct. Biol. 5, 555-560, 1998) implicated Asp 84 or its analog in the C-terminal half, Asp 532, in binding of Glc-6-P. Zeng et al. (Biochemistry 35, 13157-13164, 1996) demonstrated that mutation of Asp 532 to Lys or Glu did not affect inhibition by the Glc-6-P analog, 1,5-anhydroglucitol-6-P. These same mutations, as well as mutation to Ala, at the Asp 84 position are now shown to result in increased Ki for 1,5-anhydroglucitol-6-P. The ability of Pi to antagonize inhibition by the Glc-6-P analog is severely diminished or abolished by these mutations, suggesting that antagonism is dependent on precise positioning of the inhibitory hexose 6-phosphate. The structure of the enzyme complexed with Glc and Pi has been determined, and shows that Pi occupies the same site as the 6-phosphate group in the complex with Glc-6-P. Thus, antagonism between these ligands results from competition for a common anion binding site in the N-terminal half.
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Related Subject Headings
- Transfection
- Recombinant Proteins
- Rats
- Protein Conformation
- Phosphates
- Mutation
- Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
- Models, Molecular
- Kinetics
- Hexokinase
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Transfection
- Recombinant Proteins
- Rats
- Protein Conformation
- Phosphates
- Mutation
- Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
- Models, Molecular
- Kinetics
- Hexokinase