Active site remodeling in tumor-relevant IDH1 mutants drives distinct kinetic features and potential resistance mechanisms.

Matthew Mealka, Nicole A Sierra,Diego Avellaneda Matteo,Elene Albekioni, Rachel Khoury, Timothy Mai, Brittany M Conley, Nalani J Coleman, Kaitlyn A Sabo,Elizabeth A Komives, Andrey A Bobkov,Andrew L Cooksy,Steve Silletti,Jamie M Schiffer,Tom Huxford,Christal D Sohl

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2024)

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摘要
Mutations in human isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) drive tumor formation in a variety of cancers by replacing its conventional activity with a neomorphic activity that generates an oncometabolite. Little is understood of the mechanistic differences among tumor-driving IDH1 mutants. We previously reported that the R132Q mutant uniquely preserves conventional activity while catalyzing robust oncometabolite production, allowing an opportunity to compare these reaction mechanisms within a single active site. Here, we employed static and dynamic structural methods and found that, compared to R132H, the R132Q active site adopted a conformation primed for catalysis with optimized substrate binding and hydride transfer to drive improved conventional and neomorphic activity over R132H. This active site remodeling revealed a possible mechanism of resistance to selective mutant IDH1 therapeutic inhibitors. This work enhances our understanding of fundamental IDH1 mechanisms while pinpointing regions for improving inhibitor selectivity.
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