Title
Substrate-induced dimerization of engineered monomeric variants of triosephosphate isomerase from Trichomonas vaginalis
11627/371911627/3719
Author
Lara González, Samuel
Estrella, Priscilla
Portillo, Carmen
Cruces, María E
Jiménez Sandoval, Pedro
Fattori, Juliana
Migliorin Figueira, Ana C.
López Hidalgo, Marisol
Díaz Quezada, Corina
López Castillo, Laura Margarita
Trasviña Arenas, Carlos Humberto
Sánchez Sandoval, Maria Eugenia
Gómez Puyou, Armando
Ortega López, Jaime
Arroyo, Rossana
Benítez Cardoza, Claudia Guadalupe
Brieba, Luis G
Abstract
"The dimeric nature of triosephosphate isomerases (TIMs) is maintained by an extensive surface area interface of more than 1600 angstrom 2. TIMs from Trichomonas vaginalis (TvTIM) are held in their dimeric state by two mechanisms: a ball and socket interaction of residue 45 of one subunit that fits into the hydrophobic pocket of the complementary subunit and by swapping of loop 3 between subunits. TvTIMs differ from other TIMs in their unfolding energetics. In TvTIMs the energy necessary to unfold a monomer is greater than the energy necessary to dissociate the dimer. Herein we found that the character of residue I45 controls the dimer-monomer equilibrium in TvTIMs. Unfolding experiments employing monomeric and dimeric mutants led us to conclude that dimeric TvTIMs unfold following a four state model denaturation process whereas monomeric TvTIMs follow a three state model. In contrast to other monomeric TIMs, monomeric variants of TvTIM1 are stable and unexpectedly one of them (I45A) is only 29-fold less active than wild-type TvTIM1. The high enzymatic activity of monomeric TvTIMs contrast with the marginal catalytic activity of diverse monomeric TIMs variants. The stability of the monomeric variants of TvTIM1 and the use of cross-linking and analytical ultracentrifugation experiments permit us to understand the differences between the catalytic activities of TvTIMs and other marginally active monomeric TIMs. As TvTIMs do not unfold upon dimer dissociation, herein we found that the high enzymatic activity of monomeric TvTIM variants is explained by the formation of catalytic dimeric competent species assisted by substrate binding."