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Identification of biochemically neutral positions in liver pyruvate kinase
by
Martin, Tyler A.
, Wu, Tiffany
, Dougherty, Larissa L.
, Tang, Qingling
, Parente, Daniel J.
, Swint-Kruse, Liskin
, Fenton, Aron W.
in
Biochemistry
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Identification of biochemically neutral positions in liver pyruvate kinase
by
Martin, Tyler A.
, Wu, Tiffany
, Dougherty, Larissa L.
, Tang, Qingling
, Parente, Daniel J.
, Swint-Kruse, Liskin
, Fenton, Aron W.
in
Biochemistry
2020
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Identification of biochemically neutral positions in liver pyruvate kinase
Paper
Identification of biochemically neutral positions in liver pyruvate kinase
2020
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Overview
Understanding how each residue position contributes to protein function has been a long-standing goal in protein science. Substitution studies have historically focused on conserved protein positions. However, substitutions of nonconserved positions can also modify function. Indeed, we recently identified nonconserved positions that have large substitution effects in human liver pyruvate kinase (hLPYK), including altered allosteric coupling. To facilitate a comparison of which characteristics determine when a nonconserved position does vs. does not contribute to function, the goal of the current work was to identify neutral positions in hLPYK. However, existing hLPYK data showed that three features commonly associated with neutral positions – high sequence entropy, high surface exposure, and alanine scanning – lacked the sensitivity needed to guide experimental studies. We used multiple evolutionary patterns identified in a sequence alignment of the PYK family to identify which positions were least patterned, reasoning that these were most likely to be neutral. Nine positions were tested with a total of 117 amino acid substitutions. Although exploring all potential functions is not feasible for any protein, five parameters associated with substrate/effector affinities and allosteric coupling were measured for hLPYK variants. For each position, the aggregate functional outcomes of all variants were used to quantify a “neutrality” score. Three positions showed perfect neutral scores for all five parameters. Furthermore, the nine positions showed larger neutral scores than 17 positions located near allosteric binding sites. Thus, our strategy successfully enriched the dataset for positions with neutral and modest substitutions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
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