Farnesyl diphosphate analogues with aryl moieties are efficient alternate substrates for protein farnesyltransferase.

BIOCHEMISTRY(2012)

Cited 13|Views4
No score
Abstract
Farnesylation is an important post-translational modification essential for the proper localization and function of many proteins. Transfer of the famesyl group from farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) to proteins is catalyzed by protein farnesyltransferase (FTase). We employed a library of FPP analogues with a range of aryl groups substituting for individual isoprene moieties to examine some of the structural and electronic properties of the transfer of an analogue to the peptide catalyzed by FTase. Analysis of steady-state kinetics for modification of peptide substrates revealed that the multiple-turnover activity depends on the analogue structure. Analogues in which the first isoprene is replaced with a benzyl group and an analogue in which each isoprene is replaced with an aryl group are good substrates. In sharp contrast with the steady-state reaction, the single-turnover rate constant for dansyl-GCVLS alkylation was found to be the same for all analogues, despite the increased chemical reactivity of the benzyl analogues and the increased steric bulk of other analogues. However, the single-turnover rate constant for alkylation does depend on the Ca(1)a(2)X peptide sequence. These results suggest that the isoprenoid transition-state conformation is preferred over the inactive E.FPP.Ca(1)a(2)X ternary complex conformation. Furthermore, these data suggest that the famesyl binding site in the exit groove may be significantly more selective for the farnesyl diphosphate substrate than the active site binding pocket and therefore might be a useful site for the design of novel inhibitors.
More
Translated text
Key words
catalysis,kinetics,alkylation,magnetic resonance spectroscopy
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined