Abstract
The binding between an enzyme and its substrate is highly specific, despite the fact that many different enzymes show significant sequence and structure similarity. There must be, then, substrate specificity-determining residues that enable different enzymes to recognize their unique substrates. We reason that a coordinated, not independent, action of both conserved and non-conserved residues determine enzymatic activity and specificity. Here, we present a surface patch ranking (SPR) method for in silico discovery of substrate specificity-determining residue clusters by exploring both sequence conservation and correlated mutations. As case studies we apply SPR to several highly homologous enzymatic protein pairs, such as guanylyl versus adenylyl cyclases, lactate versus malate dehydrogenases, and trypsin versus chymotrypsin. Without using experimental data, we predict several single and multi-residue clusters that are consistent with previous mutagenesis experimental results. Most single-residue clusters are directly involved in enzyme-substrate interactions, whereas multi-residue clusters are vital for domain-domain and regulator-enzyme interactions, indicating their complementary role in specificity determination. These results demonstrate that SPR may help the selection of target residues for mutagenesis experiments and, thus, focus rational drug design, protein engineering, and functional annotation to the relevant regions of a protein.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1105-1117 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Journal of Molecular Biology |
| Volume | 352 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Oct 7 2005 |
Funding
This work was funded, in part or in full, by the US Department of Energy's Genomes to Life program ( www.doegenomestolife.org ) under project, Carbon Sequestration in Synechococcus Sp. : From Molecular Machines to Hierarchical Modeling ( www.genomes-to-life.org ). The work of N.F.S. was sponsored by the Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program of Oak Ridge National Laboratory. This research used resources of the Center for Computational Sciences and the eXtreme TORC cluster at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Oak Ridge National Laboratory is managed by UT-Battelle for the LLC U.S. D.O.E. under contract no. DE-AC05-00OR22725.
Keywords
- Correlated mutations
- Enzyme-substrate specificity-determining residues
- Mutagenesis
- Sequence conservation
- Surface patch ranking
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