Weikl Thomas R, Hemmateenejad Bahram
Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Department of Theory and Bio-Systems, Potsdam, Germany.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 2013 May;1834(5):867-73. doi: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2013.01.027. Epub 2013 Feb 1.
A central question is how the conformational changes of proteins affect their function and the inhibition of this function by drug molecules. Many enzymes change from an open to a closed conformation upon binding of substrate or inhibitor molecules. These conformational changes have been suggested to follow an induced-fit mechanism in which the molecules first bind in the open conformation in those cases where binding in the closed conformation appears to be sterically obstructed such as for the HIV-1 protease. In this article, we present a general model for the catalysis and inhibition of enzymes with induced-fit binding mechanism. We derive general expressions that specify how the overall catalytic rate of the enzymes depends on the rates for binding, for the conformational changes, and for the chemical reaction. Based on these expressions, we analyze the effect of mutations that mainly shift the conformational equilibrium on catalysis and inhibition. If the overall catalytic rate is limited by product unbinding, we find that mutations that destabilize the closed conformation relative to the open conformation increase the catalytic rate in the presence of inhibitors by a factor exp(ΔΔGC/RT) where ΔΔGC is the mutation-induced shift of the free-energy difference between the conformations. This increase in the catalytic rate due to changes in the conformational equilibrium is independent of the inhibitor molecule and, thus, may help to understand how non-active-site mutations can contribute to the multi-drug-resistance that has been observed for the HIV-1 protease. A comparison to experimental data for the non-active-site mutation L90M of the HIV-1 protease indicates that the mutation slightly destabilizes the closed conformation of the enzyme. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The emerging dynamic view of proteins: Protein plasticity in allostery, evolution and self-assembly.
一个核心问题是蛋白质的构象变化如何影响其功能以及药物分子对这种功能的抑制作用。许多酶在结合底物或抑制剂分子后会从开放构象转变为封闭构象。这些构象变化被认为遵循诱导契合机制,即在那些封闭构象的结合似乎存在空间阻碍的情况下,如HIV-1蛋白酶,分子首先以开放构象结合。在本文中,我们提出了一个具有诱导契合结合机制的酶催化和抑制的通用模型。我们推导了通用表达式,这些表达式明确了酶的整体催化速率如何取决于结合速率、构象变化速率和化学反应速率。基于这些表达式,我们分析了主要改变构象平衡的突变对催化和抑制的影响。如果整体催化速率受产物解离限制,我们发现相对于开放构象使封闭构象不稳定的突变,在存在抑制剂的情况下会使催化速率提高exp(ΔΔGC/RT)倍,其中ΔΔGC是突变引起的构象之间自由能差的变化。由于构象平衡变化导致的催化速率增加与抑制剂分子无关,因此可能有助于理解非活性位点突变如何导致HIV-1蛋白酶出现多药耐药性。与HIV-1蛋白酶非活性位点突变L9M的实验数据比较表明,该突变使酶的封闭构象略微不稳定。本文是名为:蛋白质的新兴动态观点:变构、进化和自组装中的蛋白质可塑性的特刊的一部分。