Catalytic mechanism study of ATP-citrate lyase during citryl-CoA synthesis process

ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY) is a critical metabolic enzyme and promising target for drug development. The structure determinations of ACLY have revealed its homotetramer states with various subunit symmetries, but catalytic mechanism of ACLY tetramer and the importance of subunit symmetry have not been...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2024-09, Vol.27 (9), p.110605, Article 110605
Hauptverfasser: Shi, Danfeng, Zhu, Xiaohong, Zhang, Honghui, Yan, Junfang, Bai, Chen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ATP-citrate lyase (ACLY) is a critical metabolic enzyme and promising target for drug development. The structure determinations of ACLY have revealed its homotetramer states with various subunit symmetries, but catalytic mechanism of ACLY tetramer and the importance of subunit symmetry have not been clarified. Here, we constructed the free energy landscape of ACLY tetramer with arbitrary subunit symmetries and investigated energetic and conformational coupling of subunits during citryl-CoA synthesis process. The optimal conformational pathway indicates that ACLY tetramer encounters three critical conformational barriers and undergoes a loss of rigid-D2 symmetry to gain an energetic advantage. Energetic coupling of conformational changes and biochemical reactions suggests that these biological events are not independent but rather coupled with each other, showing a comparable energy barrier to the experimental data for the rate-limiting step. These findings could contribute to further research on catalytic mechanism, functional modulation, and inhibitor design of ACLY. [Display omitted] •We constructed free energy landscape of ACLY tetramer with arbitrary symmetries•ACLY tetramer encounters 3 conformational barriers and rigid-D2 symmetry loss•Conformational changes and sub-reactions are energetically coupled for ACLY Catalysis; Enzymology; Biochemical mechanism; Properties of biomolecules; Biophysical Chemistry
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2024.110605