Order-Disorder Transitions Govern Kinetic Cooperativity and Allostery of Monomeric Human Glucokinase


Autoria(s): Larion, Mioara; Salinas, Roberto Kopke; Bruschweiler-Li, Lei; Miller, Brian G.; Brueschweiler, Rafael
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

20/09/2013

20/09/2013

2012

Resumo

Glucokinase (GCK) catalyzes the rate-limiting step of glucose catabolism in the pancreas, where it functions as the body's principal glucose sensor. GCK dysfunction leads to several potentially fatal diseases including maturity-onset diabetes of the young type II (MODY-II) and persistent hypoglycemic hyperinsulinemia of infancy (PHHI). GCK maintains glucose homeostasis by displaying a sigmoidal kinetic response to increasing blood glucose levels. This positive cooperativity is unique because the enzyme functions exclusively as a monomer and possesses only a single glucose binding site. Despite nearly a half century of research, the mechanistic basis for GCK's homotropic allostery remains unresolved. Here we explain GCK cooperativity in terms of large-scale, glucose-mediated disorder-order transitions using 17 isotopically labeled isoleucine methyl groups and three tryptophan side chains as sensitive nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) probes. We find that the small domain of unliganded GCK is intrinsically disordered and samples a broad conformational ensemble. We also demonstrate that small-molecule diabetes therapeutic agents and hyperinsulinemia-associated GCK mutations share a strikingly similar activation mechanism, characterized by a population shift toward a more narrow, well-ordered ensemble resembling the glucose-bound conformation. Our results support a model in which GCK generates its cooperative kinetic response at low glucose concentrations by using a millisecond disorder-order cycle of the small domain as a "time-delay loop," which is bypassed at high glucose concentrations, providing a unique mechanism to allosterically regulate the activity of human GCK under physiological conditions.

NIH [1R01DK081358]

NIH

NSF [MCB-0918362]

NSF

American Heart Association

American Heart Association

Identificador

PLOS BIOLOGY, SAN FRANCISCO, v. 10, n. 12, pp. 1775-1787, DEC, 2012

1545-7885

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/33523

10.1371/journal.pbio.1001452

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001452

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

SAN FRANCISCO

Relação

PLOS BIOLOGY

Direitos

openAccess

Copyright PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Palavras-Chave #PERSISTENT HYPERINSULINEMIC HYPOGLYCEMIA #DIABETES-MELLITUS #NMR-SPECTROSCOPY #SLOW TRANSITION #GLUCOSE #BINDING #ACTIVATORS #MUTATION #MODEL #ENZYME #BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY #BIOLOGY
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion