Journal article
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2015
APA
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Blackmore, N. J., Nazmi, A., Hutton, R., Webby, M. N., Baker, E., Jameson, G., & Parker, E. (2015). Complex Formation between Two Biosynthetic Enzymes Modifies the Allosteric Regulatory Properties of Both. Journal of Biological Chemistry.
Chicago/Turabian
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Blackmore, N. J., A. Nazmi, R. Hutton, M. N. Webby, E. Baker, G. Jameson, and E. Parker. “Complex Formation between Two Biosynthetic Enzymes Modifies the Allosteric Regulatory Properties of Both.” Journal of Biological Chemistry (2015).
MLA
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Blackmore, N. J., et al. “Complex Formation between Two Biosynthetic Enzymes Modifies the Allosteric Regulatory Properties of Both.” Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2015.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{n2015a,
title = {Complex Formation between Two Biosynthetic Enzymes Modifies the Allosteric Regulatory Properties of Both},
year = {2015},
journal = {Journal of Biological Chemistry},
author = {Blackmore, N. J. and Nazmi, A. and Hutton, R. and Webby, M. N. and Baker, E. and Jameson, G. and Parker, E.}
}
Background: Two enzymes from Mycobacterium tuberculosis involved in aromatic amino acid biosynthesis form a hetero-octameric complex. Results: Complex formation boosts the catalytic activity of both enzymes and greatly extends the allosteric effector sensitivity. Conclusion: Enzyme interactions allow complex allosteric machinery of one of the complex partners to be shared. Significance: Sophisticated allosteric responses are delivered through protein-protein interactions, allowing enhanced metabolic control. Allostery, where remote ligand binding alters protein function, is essential for the control of metabolism. Here, we have identified a highly sophisticated allosteric response that allows complex control of the pathway for aromatic amino acid biosynthesis in the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis. This response is mediated by an enzyme complex formed by two pathway enzymes: chorismate mutase (CM) and 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate synthase (DAH7PS). Whereas both enzymes are active in isolation, the catalytic activity of both enzymes is enhanced, and in particular that of the much smaller CM is greatly enhanced (by 120-fold), by formation of a hetero-octameric complex between CM and DAH7PS. Moreover, on complex formation M. tuberculosis CM, which has no allosteric response on its own, acquires allosteric behavior to facilitate its own regulatory needs by directly appropriating and partly reconfiguring the allosteric machinery that provides a synergistic allosteric response in DAH7PS. Kinetic and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments demonstrate that allosteric binding of phenylalanine specifically promotes hetero-octameric complex dissociation, with concomitant reduction of CM activity. Together, DAH7PS and CM from M. tuberculosis provide exquisite control of aromatic amino acid biosynthesis, not only controlling flux into the start of the pathway, but also directing the pathway intermediate chorismate into either Phe/Tyr or Trp biosynthesis.