Slow domain reconfiguration causes power-law kinetics in a two-state enzyme

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Abstract

Protein dynamics are typically captured well by rate equations that predict exponential decays for two-state reactions. Here, we describe a remarkable exception. The electron-transfer enzyme quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX), a natural fusion of two functionally distinct domains, switches between open- and closed-domain arrangements with apparent power-law kinetics. Using single-molecule FRET experiments on time scales from nanoseconds to milliseconds, we show that the unusual openclose kinetics results from slow sampling of an ensemble of disordered domain orientations. While substrate accelerates the kinetics, thus suggesting a substrate-induced switch to an alternative free energy landscape of the enzyme, the power-law behavior is also preserved upon electron load. Our results show that the slow sampling of open conformers is caused by a variety of interdomain interactions that imply a rugged free energy landscape, thus providing a generic mechanism for dynamic disorder in multidomain enzymes.

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Grossman-Haham, I., Rosenblum, G., Namani, T., & Hofmann, H. (2018). Slow domain reconfiguration causes power-law kinetics in a two-state enzyme. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115(3), 513–518. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1714401115

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