Structural Basis for GTP versus ATP Selectivity in
the NMP Kinase AK3
Posted on 2020-09-11 - 21:06
ATP
and GTP are exceptionally important molecules in biology with
multiple, and often discrete, functions. Therefore, enzymes that bind
to either of them must develop robust mechanisms to selectively utilize
one or the other. Here, this specific problem is addressed by molecular
studies of the human NMP kinase AK3, which uses GTP to phosphorylate
AMP. AK3 plays an important role in the citric acid cycle, where it
is responsible for GTP/GDP recycling. By combining a structural biology
approach with functional experiments, we present a comprehensive structural
and mechanistic understanding of the enzyme. We discovered that AK3
functions by recruitment of GTP to the active site, while ATP is rejected
and nonproductively bound to the AMP binding site. Consequently, ATP
acts as an inhibitor with respect to GTP and AMP. The overall features
with specific recognition of the correct substrate and nonproductive
binding by the incorrect substrate bear a strong similarity to previous
findings for the ATP specific NMP kinase adenylate kinase. Taken together,
we are now able to provide the fundamental principles for GTP and
ATP selectivity in the large NMP kinase family. As a side-result originating
from nonlinearity of chemical shifts in GTP and ATP titrations, we
find that protein surfaces offer a general and weak binding affinity
for both GTP and ATP. These nonspecific interactions likely act to
lower the available intracellular GTP and ATP concentrations and may
have driven evolution of the Michaelis constants of NMP kinases accordingly.
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Rogne, Per; Dulko-Smith, Beata; Goodman, Jack; Rosselin, Marie; Grundström, Christin; Hedberg, Christian; et al. (2020). Structural Basis for GTP versus ATP Selectivity in
the NMP Kinase AK3. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00549