AI Article Synopsis

  • ACATs (Adenosyltransferases) transfer adenosyl from ATP to corrinoid substrates and are divided into three families: CobA, PduO, and EutT, with EutT having two classes based on metal ion requirement.
  • Bioinformatics analyses showed conserved residues between EutT homologues and the structurally characterized PduO, with mutations suggesting these residues influence ATP binding in class II EutT.
  • Further analysis revealed that specific substitutions in EutT affected substrate accessibility and binding, indicating EutT uses a different mechanism from PduO and CobA for function, despite sharing some structural features.

Article Abstract

ATP:Co(I)rrinoid adenosyltransferases (ACATs) catalyze the transfer of the adenosyl moiety from co-substrate ATP to a corrinoid substrate. ACATs are grouped into three families, namely, CobA, PduO, and EutT. The EutT family of enzymes is further divided into two classes, depending on whether they require a divalent metal ion for activity (class I and class II). To date, a structure has not been elucidated for either class of the EutT family of ACATs. In this work, results of bioinformatics analyses revealed several conserved residues between the C-terminus of EutT homologues and the structurally characterized PduO (PduO) homologue. In PduO, these residues are associated with ATP binding and formation of an intersubunit salt bridge. These residues were substituted, and and data support the conclusion that the equivalent residues in the metal-free (i.e., class II) EutT (EutT) enzyme affect ATP binding. Results of and analyses of EutT variants with substitutions at phenylalanine and tryptophan residues revealed that replacement of the phenylalanine residue at position 72 affected access to the substrate-binding site and replacement of a tryptophan residue at position 238 affected binding of the Cbl substrate to the active site. Unlike the PduO family of ACATs, a single phenylalanine residue is not responsible for displacement of the α-ligand. Together, these data suggest that while EutT enzymes share a conserved ATP-binding motif and an intersubunit salt bridge with PduO family ACATs, class II EutT family ACATs utilize an unidentified mechanism for Cbl lower-ligand displacement and reduction that is different from that of PduO and CobA family ACATs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7097735PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00078DOI Listing

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