Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is generally considered to undergo a large and reversible conformational transition upon L-Phe binding, which is closely linked to the substrate-induced catalytic activation of this hysteretic enzyme. Recently, several crystallographically solvent-exposed hinge-bending regions including residues 31-34, 111-117, 218-226, and 425-429 have been defined/predicted to be involved in the intra-protomer propagation of the substrate-triggered molecular motions generated at the active site. On this basis, single-site mutagenesis of key residues in these regions of the human PAH tetramer was performed in the present study, and their functional impact was measured by steady-state kinetics and the global conformational transition as assessed by surface plasmon resonance and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy. A strong correlation (r2 = 0.93-0.96) was observed between the L-Phe-induced global conformational transition and Vmax values for wild-type human PAH and the mutant forms K113P, N223D, N426D, and N32D, in contrast to the substitution T427P, which resulted in a tetrameric form with no kinetic cooperativity. Furthermore, the flexible intra-domain linker region (residues 31-34) seems to be involved in a more local conformational change, and the biochemical/biophysical properties of the G33A/G33V mutant forms support a key function of this residue in the positioning of the autoregulatory sequence (residues 1-30) and thus in the regulation of the solvent and substrate access to the active site. The mutant forms revealed a variably reduced global conformational stability compared with wild-type human PAH, as measured by thermal denaturation and limited proteolysis.
CITATION STYLE
Stokka, A. J., Carvalho, R. N., Barroso, J. F., & Flatmark, T. (2004). Probing the role of crystallographically defined/predicted hinge-bending regions in the substrate-induced global conformational transition and catalytic activation of human phenylalanine hydroxylase by single-site mutagenesis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(25), 26571–26580. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M400879200
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