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Investigations on the mechanism of allosteric activation of rabbit muscle glycogen phosphorylase b by AMP

Posted on:2010-05-22Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Texas A&M UniversityCandidate:Bigley, Andrew NathanFull Text:PDF
GTID:1444390002978968Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
Much work has been carried out on glycogen phosphorylase over the last seventy years. Interest has persisted due not only to the usefulness of phosphorylase as a model system of allostery, but also due to the connection to the disease state in type II diabetes. The bulk of research consists of structural studies utilizing the wild-type enzyme from rabbit muscle. In this study we have employed linkage analysis in combination with structural perturbations via site-directed mutagenesis to test kinetic models of activation of phosphorylase b by AMP, and to examine the roles of the N-terminus, the acidic patch, alpha-helix 1 and the 280's loop in activation by AMP. Experiments have been carried out on purified glycogen phosphorylase b variants to determine the effects of perturbations in vitro.;The kinetic models of activation by AMP are found to be a relatively accurate description of kinetic behavior of wild-type phosphorylase b, but are found to be technically incorrect with respect to the absolute requirements of two equivalents of AMP to be bound prior to catalysis. Phosphorylase b demonstrates activity in the absence of AMP, though only at high concentrations of phosphate, and a hybrid phosphorylase b with only a single functional AMP binding sight shows slight activation.;The truncate Delta2-17 shows weakened binding to AMP and phosphate in the apo enzyme, but maintains activation by AMP to an affinity similar to that of wild-type, indicating that the N-terminus is not required for activation by AMP, but has a role in establishing the affinity for both AMP and phosphate in the apo enzyme. Perturbations of the acidic patch indicate that interactions between the acidic patch and the N-terminus enhance the affinities in the apo enzyme, suggesting that the structures of the N-terminus at the acidic patch may represent an active form of the enzyme. alpha-helix 1 is found to have a role in homotropic cooperativity in phosphorylase b, but not in heterotropic activation by AMP, while the 280's loop is confirmed to have a role in the heterotropic coupling between AMP and phosphate. Based on the findings in this study an alternate structural model of activation by AMP involving alpha-helix 8 is proposed.
Keywords/Search Tags:Activation, Phosphorylase, Rabbit muscle, AMP and phosphate, Acidic patch
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