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Structure and mechanistic analyses of the gating mechanism of elongating ketosynthases.

Authors :
Mindrebo JT
Chen A
Kim WE
Re RN
Davis TD
Noel JP
Burkart MD
Source :
ACS catalysis [ACS Catal] 2021 Jun 18; Vol. 11 (12), pp. 6787-6799. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 May 26.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Ketosynthases (KSs) catalyze carbon-carbon bond forming reactions in fatty acid synthases (FASs) and polyketide synthases (PKSs). KSs utilize a two-step ping pong kinetic mechanism to carry out an overall decarboxylative thio-Claisen condensation that can be separated into the transacylation and condensation reactions. In both steps, an acyl carrier protein (ACP) delivers thioester tethered substrates to the active sites of KSs. Therefore, protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and KS-mediated substrate recognition events are required for catalysis. Recently, crystal structures of Escherichia coli elongating type II FAS KSs, FabF and FabB, in complex with E. coli ACP, AcpP, revealed distinct conformational states of two active site KS loops. These loops were proposed to operate via a gating mechanism to coordinate substrate recognition and delivery followed by catalysis. Here we interrogate this proposed gating mechanism by solving two additional high-resolution structures of substrate engaged AcpP-FabF complexes, one of which provides the missing AcpP-FabF gate-closed conformation. Clearly defined interactions of one of these active site loops with AcpP are present in both the open and closed conformations, suggesting AcpP binding triggers or stabilizes gating transitions, further implicating PPIs in carrier protein-dependent catalysis. We functionally demonstrate the importance of gating in the overall KS condensation reaction and provide experimental evidence for its role in the transacylation reaction. Furthermore, we evaluate the catalytic importance of these loops using alanine scanning mutagenesis and also investigate chimeric FabF constructs carrying elements found in type I PKS KS domains. These findings broaden our understanding of the KS mechanism which advances future engineering efforts in both FASs and evolutionarily related PKSs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2155-5435
Volume :
11
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ACS catalysis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36187225
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.1c00745