Temperature-sensitive contacts in disordered loops tune enzyme I activity

Author:

Burns Daniel1ORCID,Singh Aayushi2ORCID,Venditti Vincenzo12,Potoyan Davit A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Roy J. Carver Department of Biochemistry, Biophysics and Molecular Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011

2. Department of Chemistry, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011

Abstract

Homologous enzymes with identical folds often exhibit different thermal and kinetic behaviors. Understanding how an enzyme sequence encodes catalytic activity at functionally optimal temperatures is a fundamental problem in biophysics. Recently it was shown that the residues that tune catalytic activities of thermophilic/mesophilic variants of the C-terminal domain of bacterial enzyme I (EIC) are largely localized within disordered loops, offering a model system with which to investigate this phenomenon. In this work, we use molecular dynamics simulations and mutagenesis experiments to reveal a mechanism of sequence-dependent activity tuning of EIC homologs. We find that a network of contacts in the catalytic loops is particularly sensitive to changes in temperature, with some contacts exhibiting distinct linear or nonlinear temperature-dependent trends. Moreover, these trends define structurally clustered dynamical modes and can distinguish regions that tend toward order or disorder at higher temperatures. Assaying several thermophilic EIC mutants, we show that complementary mesophilic mutations to the most temperature-sensitive positions exhibit the most enhanced activity, while mutations to relatively temperature insensitive positions exhibit the least enhanced activities. These results provide a mechanistic explanation of sequence-dependent temperature tuning and offer a computational method for rational enzyme modification.

Funder

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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