Relief of autoinhibition by conformational switch explains enzyme activation by a catalytically dead paralog

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Abstract

Catalytically inactive enzyme paralogs occur in many genomes. Some regulate their active counterparts but the structural principles of this regulation remain largely unknown. We report X-ray structures of Trypanosoma brucei S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase alone and in functional complex with its catalytically dead paralogous partner, prozyme. We show monomeric TbAdoMetDC is inactive because of autoinhibition by its N-terminal sequence. Heterodimerization with prozyme displaces this sequence from the active site through a complex mechanism involving a cis-to-trans proline isomerization, reorganization of a b-sheet, and insertion of the N-terminal a-helix into the heterodimer interface, leading to enzyme activation. We propose that the evolution of this intricate regulatory mechanism was facilitated by the acquisition of the dimerization domain, a single step that can in principle account for the divergence of regulatory schemes in the AdoMetDC enzyme family. These studies elucidate an allosteric mechanism in an enzyme and a plausible scheme by which such complex cooperativity evolved.

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Volkov, O. A., Kinch, L., Ariagno, C., Deng, X., Zhong, S., Grishin, N., … Phillips, M. A. (2016). Relief of autoinhibition by conformational switch explains enzyme activation by a catalytically dead paralog. ELife, 5(DECEMBER2016). https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.20198

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