NMR analysis of site‐specific mutants of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase

Abstract
Site-specific mutants of yeast phosphoglycerate kinase have been produced in order to investigate the roles of the ‘basic-patch’ residues, arginine 168 and histidine 170. The fully-conserved residue, arginine 168, has been replaced with a lysine (R168K) and a methionine (R168M) residue, while the non-conserved histidine 170 has been replaced with an aspartate (H170D). Comparison of the 500-MHz 1H-NMR spectra of the mutant proteins with that of wild-type phosphoglycerate kinase shows that the overall fold of the mutants remains essentially unaltered from that of the native emzyme. Results of NOE experiments indicate that there are only very minor changes in structure in the vicinity of the mutations. These mutations have also led to firm sequence-specific resonance assignments to histidines 62, 167 and 170. NMR studies of 3-phosphoglycerate binding show that decreasing the positive charge in the sequence 168–170 reduces the binding of this substrate (by about 15-fold and 4-fold for mutants R168M and H170D respectively). Mutant R168K binds 3-phosphoglycerate with an affinity about twofold less than that of the native enzyme. Significantly, the activity of mutant H170D, measured at saturating substrate concentrations, is unchanged from that of the wild-type emzyme. This indicates that this residue is not of major importance in the binding or reaction of 3-phosphoglycerate. The observation is in agreement with results obtained for the wild-type enzyme, which indicate that 3-phosphoglycerate interacts most strongly with histidine 62 and least strongly with histidine 170, as would be predicted from the X-ray crystal structure. Substitution of positively charged arginine 168 with neutral methionine (or positively charged lysine) does not cause a detectable change in the pKa values of the neighbouring histidine groups, in as much as they remain below 3. The results reported here indicate that the observed reduction in catalytic efficiency relates less to direct electrostatic effects than to the mutants' inability to undergo 3-phosphoglycerate-induced conformational changes.