Structural dynamics and functional cooperativity of human NQO1 by ambient temperature serial crystallography and simulations
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Grieco, Alice; Boneta, Sergio; Gavira Gallardo, José Antonio; Pey Rodríguez, Ángel Luis; Basu, Shibom; Orlans, Julien; de Sanctis, Daniele; Medina, Milagros; Martín-García, José ManuelEditorial
John Wiley & Sons
Materia
Cooperativity Flavoenzyme Human NQO1
Fecha
2024-03-19Referencia bibliográfica
Grieco A, Boneta S, Gavira JA, Pey AL, Basu S, Orlans J, et al. Structural dynamics and functional cooperativity of human NQO1 by ambient temperature serial crystallography and simulations. Protein Science. 2024;33(4):e4957. https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.4957
Patrocinador
European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR (Grant number CNS2022-135713); MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ERDF (Grant number MCIN/AEI/PID2022-136369NB-I00); Ayuda de Atracción y Retención de Talento Investigador from the Community of Madrid (Grant number 2019-T1/BMD-15552); ERDF/Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities-State Research Agency (Grant number RTI2018-096246-B-I00); Consejería de Economía, Conocimiento, Empresas y Universidad, Junta de Andalucía (Grant number P18-RT-2413); ERDF/Counseling of Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge and Universities (Grant number B-BIO-84-UGR20); Gobierno de Aragon (Grant number E35-23R)Resumen
The human NQO1 (hNQO1) is a flavin adenine nucleotide (FAD)-dependent
oxidoreductase that catalyzes the two-electron reduction of quinones to hydroquinones,
being essential for the antioxidant defense system, stabilization of
tumor suppressors, and activation of quinone-based chemotherapeutics. Moreover,
it is overexpressed in several tumors, which makes it an attractive cancer
drug target. To decipher new structural insights into the flavin reductive halfreaction
of the catalytic mechanism of hNQO1, we have carried serial crystallography
experiments at new ID29 beamline of the ESRF to determine, to the
best of our knowledge, the first structure of the hNQO1 in complex with
NADH. We have also performed molecular dynamics simulations of free
hNQO1 and in complex with NADH. This is the first structural evidence that
the hNQO1 functional cooperativity is driven by structural communication
between the active sites through long-range propagation of cooperative effects
across the hNQO1 structure. Both structural results and MD simulations have
supported that the binding of NADH significantly decreases protein dynamics and stabilizes hNQO1 especially at the dimer core and interface. Altogether,
these results pave the way for future time-resolved studies, both at x-ray freeelectron
lasers and synchrotrons, of the dynamics of hNQO1 upon binding to
NADH as well as during the FAD cofactor reductive half-reaction. This knowledge
will allow us to reveal unprecedented structural information of the relevance
of the dynamics during the catalytic function of hNQO1.