Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies

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Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies. / Huang, Meilan; Li, Xiaozhou; Zou, Jian-Wei; Timson, David J.

In: Biochemistry, Vol. 52, No. 28, 2013, p. 4858-4868.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Huang, M, Li, X, Zou, J-W & Timson, DJ 2013, 'Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies', Biochemistry, vol. 52, no. 28, pp. 4858-4868. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi400228e

APA

Huang, M., Li, X., Zou, J-W., & Timson, D. J. (2013). Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies. Biochemistry, 52(28), 4858-4868. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi400228e

Vancouver

Huang M, Li X, Zou J-W, Timson DJ. Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies. Biochemistry. 2013;52(28):4858-4868. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi400228e

Author

Huang, Meilan ; Li, Xiaozhou ; Zou, Jian-Wei ; Timson, David J. / Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies. In: Biochemistry. 2013 ; Vol. 52, No. 28. pp. 4858-4868.

Bibtex

@article{50a05c273a4b410fab44d0353ed79cea,
title = "Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies",
abstract = "GHMP kinases are a group of structurally related small molecule kinases. They have been found in all kingdoms of life and are mostly responsible for catalyzing the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of intermediary metabolites. Although the GHMP kinases are of clinical, pharmaceutical, and biotechnological importance, the mechanism of GHMP kinases is controversial. A catalytic base mechanism was suggested for mevalonate kinase that has a structural feature of the γ-phosphate of ATP close to an aspartate residue; however, for one GHMP family member, homoserine kinase, where the residue acting as general base is absent, a direct phosphorylation mechanism was suggested. Furthermore, it was proposed by some authors that all the GHMP kinases function by a similar mechanism. This controversy in mechanism has limited our ability to exploit these enzymes as drug targets and in biotechnology. Here the phosphorylation reaction mechanism of the human galactokinase, a member of the GHMP kinase family, was investigated using molecular dynamics simulations and density functional theory-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations (B3LYP-D/AMBER99). The reaction coordinates were localized by potential energy scan using an adiabatic mapping method. Our results indicate that a highly conserved Glu174 captures Arg105 in the proximity of the α-phosphate of ATP, forming a H-bond network; therefore, the mobility of ATP in the large oxyanion hole is restricted. Arg228 functions to stabilize the negative charge developed at the β,γ-bridging oxygen of the ATP during bond cleavage. The reaction occurs via a direct phosphorylation mechanism, and the Asp186 in the proximity of ATP does not directly participate in the reaction pathway. Because Arg228 is not conserved among GHMP kinases, reagents which form interactions with Arg228, and therefore can interrupt its function in phosphorylation, may be developed into potential selective inhibitors for galactokinase.",
author = "Meilan Huang and Xiaozhou Li and Jian-Wei Zou and Timson, {David J.}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1021/bi400228e",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "4858--4868",
journal = "Biochemistry",
issn = "0006-2960",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "28",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Role of Arg228 in the Phosphorylation of Galactokinase: The Mechanism of GHMP Kinases by Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics Studies

AU - Huang, Meilan

AU - Li, Xiaozhou

AU - Zou, Jian-Wei

AU - Timson, David J.

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - GHMP kinases are a group of structurally related small molecule kinases. They have been found in all kingdoms of life and are mostly responsible for catalyzing the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of intermediary metabolites. Although the GHMP kinases are of clinical, pharmaceutical, and biotechnological importance, the mechanism of GHMP kinases is controversial. A catalytic base mechanism was suggested for mevalonate kinase that has a structural feature of the γ-phosphate of ATP close to an aspartate residue; however, for one GHMP family member, homoserine kinase, where the residue acting as general base is absent, a direct phosphorylation mechanism was suggested. Furthermore, it was proposed by some authors that all the GHMP kinases function by a similar mechanism. This controversy in mechanism has limited our ability to exploit these enzymes as drug targets and in biotechnology. Here the phosphorylation reaction mechanism of the human galactokinase, a member of the GHMP kinase family, was investigated using molecular dynamics simulations and density functional theory-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations (B3LYP-D/AMBER99). The reaction coordinates were localized by potential energy scan using an adiabatic mapping method. Our results indicate that a highly conserved Glu174 captures Arg105 in the proximity of the α-phosphate of ATP, forming a H-bond network; therefore, the mobility of ATP in the large oxyanion hole is restricted. Arg228 functions to stabilize the negative charge developed at the β,γ-bridging oxygen of the ATP during bond cleavage. The reaction occurs via a direct phosphorylation mechanism, and the Asp186 in the proximity of ATP does not directly participate in the reaction pathway. Because Arg228 is not conserved among GHMP kinases, reagents which form interactions with Arg228, and therefore can interrupt its function in phosphorylation, may be developed into potential selective inhibitors for galactokinase.

AB - GHMP kinases are a group of structurally related small molecule kinases. They have been found in all kingdoms of life and are mostly responsible for catalyzing the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of intermediary metabolites. Although the GHMP kinases are of clinical, pharmaceutical, and biotechnological importance, the mechanism of GHMP kinases is controversial. A catalytic base mechanism was suggested for mevalonate kinase that has a structural feature of the γ-phosphate of ATP close to an aspartate residue; however, for one GHMP family member, homoserine kinase, where the residue acting as general base is absent, a direct phosphorylation mechanism was suggested. Furthermore, it was proposed by some authors that all the GHMP kinases function by a similar mechanism. This controversy in mechanism has limited our ability to exploit these enzymes as drug targets and in biotechnology. Here the phosphorylation reaction mechanism of the human galactokinase, a member of the GHMP kinase family, was investigated using molecular dynamics simulations and density functional theory-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations (B3LYP-D/AMBER99). The reaction coordinates were localized by potential energy scan using an adiabatic mapping method. Our results indicate that a highly conserved Glu174 captures Arg105 in the proximity of the α-phosphate of ATP, forming a H-bond network; therefore, the mobility of ATP in the large oxyanion hole is restricted. Arg228 functions to stabilize the negative charge developed at the β,γ-bridging oxygen of the ATP during bond cleavage. The reaction occurs via a direct phosphorylation mechanism, and the Asp186 in the proximity of ATP does not directly participate in the reaction pathway. Because Arg228 is not conserved among GHMP kinases, reagents which form interactions with Arg228, and therefore can interrupt its function in phosphorylation, may be developed into potential selective inhibitors for galactokinase.

U2 - 10.1021/bi400228e

DO - 10.1021/bi400228e

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23786354

VL - 52

SP - 4858

EP - 4868

JO - Biochemistry

JF - Biochemistry

SN - 0006-2960

IS - 28

ER -

ID: 99110328