Stability domains, substrate-induced conformational changes, and hinge-bending motions in a psychrophilic phosphoglycerate kinase: A microcalorimetric study

peer reviewed The cold-active phosphoglycerate kinase from the Antarctic bacterium Pseudomonas sp. TACII18 exhibits two distinct stability domains in the free, open conformation. It is shown that these stability domains do not match the structural N- and C-domains as the heat-stable domain correspon...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Biological Chemistry
Main Authors: Zecchinon, Laurent, Oriol, A., Netzel, U., Svennberg, J., Gerardin-Otthiers, N., Feller, Georges
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Amer Soc Biochemistry Molecular Biology Inc 2005
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Online Access:https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/15405
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/15405/1/JBC_2005_PGK.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M506464200
Description
Summary:peer reviewed The cold-active phosphoglycerate kinase from the Antarctic bacterium Pseudomonas sp. TACII18 exhibits two distinct stability domains in the free, open conformation. It is shown that these stability domains do not match the structural N- and C-domains as the heat-stable domain corresponds to about 80 residues of the C-domain, including the nucleotide binding site, whereas the remaining of the protein contributes to the main heat-labile domain. This was demonstrated by spectroscopic and microcalorimetric analyses of the native enzyme, of its mutants, and of the isolated recombinant structural domains. It is proposed that the heat-stable domain provides a compact structure improving the binding affinity of the nucleotide, therefore increasing the catalytic efficiency at low temperatures. Upon substrate binding, the enzyme adopts a uniformly more stable closed conformation. Substrate-induced stability changes suggest that the free energy of ligand binding is converted into an increased conformational stability used to drive the hinge-bending motions and domain closure.