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1.
Chem Sci ; 13(45): 13524-13540, 2022 Nov 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36507179

ABSTRACT

Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) possess a conserved mobile catalytic loop, the WPD-loop, which brings an aspartic acid into the active site where it acts as an acid/base catalyst. Prior experimental and computational studies, focused on the human enzyme PTP1B and the PTP from Yersinia pestis, YopH, suggested that loop conformational dynamics are important in regulating both catalysis and evolvability. We have generated a chimeric protein in which the WPD-loop of YopH is transposed into PTP1B, and eight chimeras that systematically restored the loop sequence back to native PTP1B. Of these, four chimeras were soluble and were subjected to detailed biochemical and structural characterization, and a computational analysis of their WPD-loop dynamics. The chimeras maintain backbone structural integrity, with somewhat slower rates than either wild-type parent, and show differences in the pH dependency of catalysis, and changes in the effect of Mg2+. The chimeric proteins' WPD-loops differ significantly in their relative stability and rigidity. The time required for interconversion, coupled with electrostatic effects revealed by simulations, likely accounts for the activity differences between chimeras, and relative to the native enzymes. Our results further the understanding of connections between enzyme activity and the dynamics of catalytically important groups, particularly the effects of non-catalytic residues on key conformational equilibria.

2.
Anal Biochem ; 651: 114727, 2022 08 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35580735

ABSTRACT

The two constitutional isomers of naphthyl phosphate have different steric properties, analogous to those of phosphotyrosine versus phosphoserine/threonine within a peptide or protein. The ratios of their respective rates of hydrolysis, assayed by measuring rates of inorganic phosphate release, have been used to probe the steric requirements around the active sites of many phosphatases in the literature. We report an NMR-based competitive method that is simpler to execute and has other advantages. It directly yields the ratio of catalytic efficiencies (V/K) of the two substrates, a more biologically relevant comparison than the ratio of initial rates (vo) or maximal rates (Vmax). The competitive method ensures that temperature, pH, enzyme and substrate concentrations, and the presence of any potential inhibitors are identical and will not skew the results. The method can be easily applied at any chosen temperature or pH, and to mutants, or under any other condition that might influence protein conformation and, thus, substrate specificity. It provides a facile screening method to select conditions for a detailed phosphopeptide screen to provide deeper insight into substrate preference.


Subject(s)
Organophosphorus Compounds , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases , Kinetics , Naphthalenes , Organophosphorus Compounds/chemistry , Phosphopeptides , Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
3.
JACS Au ; 1(5): 646-659, 2021 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34308419

ABSTRACT

Catalysis by protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) relies on the motion of a flexible protein loop (the WPD-loop) that carries a residue acting as a general acid/base catalyst during the PTP-catalyzed reaction. The orthogonal substitutions of a noncatalytic residue in the WPD-loops of YopH and PTP1B result in shifted pH-rate profiles from an altered kinetic pK a of the nucleophilic cysteine. Compared to wild type, the G352T YopH variant has a broadened pH-rate profile, similar activity at optimal pH, but significantly higher activity at low pH. Changes in the corresponding PTP1B T177G variant are more modest and in the opposite direction, with a narrowed pH profile and less activity in the most acidic range. Crystal structures of the variants show no structural perturbations but suggest an increased preference for the WPD-loop-closed conformation. Computational analysis confirms a shift in loop conformational equilibrium in favor of the closed conformation, arising from a combination of increased stability of the closed state and destabilization of the loop-open state. Simulations identify the origins of this population shift, revealing differences in the flexibility of the WPD-loop and neighboring regions. Our results demonstrate that changes to the pH dependency of catalysis by PTPs can result from small changes in amino acid composition in their WPD-loops affecting only loop dynamics and conformational equilibrium. The perturbation of kinetic pK a values of catalytic residues by nonchemical processes affords a means for nature to alter an enzyme's pH dependency by a less disruptive path than altering electrostatic networks around catalytic residues themselves.

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