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Slow domain reconfiguration causes power-law kinetics in a two-state enzyme.


ABSTRACT: Protein dynamics are typically captured well by rate equations that predict exponential decays for two-state reactions. Here, we describe a remarkable exception. The electron-transfer enzyme quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX), a natural fusion of two functionally distinct domains, switches between open- and closed-domain arrangements with apparent power-law kinetics. Using single-molecule FRET experiments on time scales from nanoseconds to milliseconds, we show that the unusual open-close kinetics results from slow sampling of an ensemble of disordered domain orientations. While substrate accelerates the kinetics, thus suggesting a substrate-induced switch to an alternative free energy landscape of the enzyme, the power-law behavior is also preserved upon electron load. Our results show that the slow sampling of open conformers is caused by a variety of interdomain interactions that imply a rugged free energy landscape, thus providing a generic mechanism for dynamic disorder in multidomain enzymes.

SUBMITTER: Grossman-Haham I 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5776979 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Slow domain reconfiguration causes power-law kinetics in a two-state enzyme.

Grossman-Haham Iris I   Rosenblum Gabriel G   Namani Trishool T   Hofmann Hagen H  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20180103 3


Protein dynamics are typically captured well by rate equations that predict exponential decays for two-state reactions. Here, we describe a remarkable exception. The electron-transfer enzyme quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX), a natural fusion of two functionally distinct domains, switches between open- and closed-domain arrangements with apparent power-law kinetics. Using single-molecule FRET experiments on time scales from nanoseconds to milliseconds, we show that the unusual open-close kineti  ...[more]

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