학술논문

Caught in Action: X‑ray Structure of Thymidylate Synthase with Noncovalent Intermediate Analog
Document Type
article
Source
Biochemistry. 60(16)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Catalytic Domain
Crystallography
X-Ray
Kinetics
Models
Molecular
Thymidylate Synthase
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical biochemistry and metabolomics
Medicinal and biomolecular chemistry
Language
Abstract
Methylation of 2-deoxyuridine-5'-monophosphate (dUMP) at the C5 position by the obligate dimeric thymidylate synthase (TSase) in the sole de novo biosynthetic pathway to thymidine 5'-monophosphate (dTMP) proceeds by forming a covalent ternary complex with dUMP and cosubstrate 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate. The crystal structure of an analog of this intermediate gives important mechanistic insights but does not explain the half-of-the-sites activity of the enzyme. Recent experiments showed that the C5 proton and the catalytic Cys are eliminated in a concerted manner from the covalent ternary complex to produce a noncovalent bisubstrate intermediate. Here, we report the crystal structure of TSase with a close synthetic analog of this intermediate in which it has partially reacted with the enzyme but in only one protomer, consistent with the half-of-the-sites activity of this enzyme. Quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations confirmed that the analog could undergo catalysis. The crystal structure shows a new water 2.9 Å from the critical C5 of the dUMP moiety, which in conjunction with other residues in the network, may be the elusive general base that abstracts the C5 proton of dUMP during the reaction.