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  • Expansion of protein farnesyltransferase specificity using "tunable" active site interactions: development of bioengineered prenylation pathways.

Expansion of protein farnesyltransferase specificity using "tunable" active site interactions: development of bioengineered prenylation pathways.

The Journal of biological chemistry (2012-09-21)
James L Hougland, Soumyashree A Gangopadhyay, Carol A Fierke
RESUMEN

Post-translational modifications play essential roles in regulating protein structure and function. Protein farnesyltransferase (FTase) catalyzes the biologically relevant lipidation of up to several hundred cellular proteins. Site-directed mutagenesis of FTase coupled with peptide selectivity measurements demonstrates that molecular recognition is determined by a combination of multiple interactions. Targeted randomization of these interactions yields FTase variants with altered and, in some cases, bio-orthogonal selectivity. We demonstrate that FTase specificity can be "tuned" using a small number of active site contacts that play essential roles in discriminating against non-substrates in the wild-type enzyme. This tunable selectivity extends in vivo, with FTase variants enabling the creation of bioengineered parallel prenylation pathways with altered substrate selectivity within a cell. Engineered FTase variants provide a novel avenue for probing both the selectivity of prenylation pathway enzymes and the effects of prenylation pathway modifications on the cellular function of a protein.