Unraveling a Ligand-Induced Twist of a Homodimeric Enzyme by Pulsed Electron-Electron Double Resonance


Date

2021-10-18

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

Mechanistic insights into protein-ligand interactions can yield chemical tools for modulating protein function and enable their use for therapeutic purposes. For the homodimeric enzyme tRNA-guanine transglycosylase (TGT), a putative virulence target of shigellosis, ligand binding has been shown by crystallography to transform the functional dimer geometry into an incompetent twisted one. However, crystallographic observation of both end states does neither verify the ligand-induced transformation of one dimer into the other in solution nor does it shed light on the underlying transformation mechanism. We addressed these questions in an approach that combines site-directed spin labeling (SDSL) with distance measurements based on pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR or DEER) spectroscopy. We observed an equilibrium between the functional and twisted dimer that depends on the type of ligand, with a pyranose-substituted ligand being the most potent one in shifting the equilibrium toward the twisted dimer. Our experiments suggest a dissociation-association mechanism for the formation of the twisted dimer upon ligand binding.

Publication status

published

Editor

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Volume

60 (43)

Pages / Article No.

23419 - 23426

Publisher

Wiley-VCH

Event

Edition / version

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Subject

EPR; homodimers; PELDOR spectroscopy; protein dynamics

Organisational unit

Notes

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