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Published May 18, 2007 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Engineered Monomeric Human Histidine Triad Nucleotide-binding Protein 1 Hydrolyzes Fluorogenic Acyl-adenylate and Lysyl-tRNA Synthetase-generated Lysyl-adenylate

Abstract

Hint1 is a homodimeric protein and member of the ubiquitous HIT superfamily. Hint1 catalyzes the hydrolysis of purine phosphoramidates and lysyl-adenylate generated by lysyl-tRNA synthetase (LysRS). To determine the importance of homodimerization on the biological and catalytic activity of Hint1, the dimer interface of human Hint1 (hHint1) was destabilized by replacement of Val97 of hHint1 with Asp, Glu, or Arg. The mutants were shown to exist as monomers in solution by a combination of size exclusion chromatograph, static light scattering, and chemically induced dimerization studies. Circular dichroism studies revealed little difference between the stability of the V97D, V97E, and wild-type hHint1. Relative to wild-type and the V97E mutant, however, significant perturbation of the V97D mutant structure was observed. hHint1 was shown to prefer 3-indolepropionic acyl-adenylate (AIPA) over tryptamine adenosine phosphoramidate monoester (TpAd). Wild-type hHint1 was found to be 277- and 1000-fold more efficient (k_(cat)/K_m values) than the V97E and V97D mutants, respectively. Adenylation of wild-type, V97D, and V97E hHint1 by human LysRS was shown to correlate with the mutant k_(cat)/K_m values using 3-indolepropionic acyl-adenylate as a substrate, but not tryptamine adenosine phosphoramidate monoester. Significant perturbations of the active site residues were not detected by molecular dynamics simulations of the hHint1s. Taken together, these results demonstrate that for hHint1; 1) the efficiency (k_(cat)/K_m) of acylated AMP hydrolysis, but not maximal catalytic turnover (k_(cat)), is dependent on homodimerization and 2) the hydrolysis of lysyl-AMP generated by LysRS is not dependent on homodimerization if the monomer structure is similar to the wild-type structure.

Additional Information

© 2007 ASBMB. Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). Received 21 July 2006, Revised 20 February 2007, Available online 2 March 2007. We thank Dr. Jonathan C. T. Carlson for preparing the dimerizer, Bis-MTX-C₉, Dr. Terry W. Steele for assistance with the static light scattering experiments, and Dr. Yuk S. Sham for assisting with molecular graphics. We thank Dr. R. A. Siegel for the use of the static light scattering instrument and Dr. Alexey Wolfson (University of Colorado, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry) for sharing the procedure for aminoacyl-adenylate synthesis. We thank Dr. Karin Musier-Forsyth (The Ohio State University) for providing the expression plasmid for human LysRS. This work was supported in part by a University of Minnesota Faculty Academic Health Center Development Grant and a grant from the National Institutes of Health. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

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Published - 1-s2.0-S0021925820636705-main.pdf

Supplemental Material - 1-s2.0-S0021925820636705-mmc1.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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