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Título
IMPDH1 retinal variants control filament architecture to tune allosteric regulation
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
IMP dehydrogenase
retina
Nucleotide metabolism
Allosteric regulation
Fecha de publicación
2022-01
Citación
Burrell, A. L., Nie, C., Said, M., Simonet, J. C., Fernández-Justel, D., Johnson, M. C., ... & Kollman, J. M. (2022). IMPDH1 retinal variants control filament architecture to tune allosteric regulation. Nature structural & molecular biology, 29(1), 47-58.
Resumen
[EN]Inosine-5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH), a key regulatory enzyme in purine nucleotide biosynthesis, dynamically assembles filaments in response to changes in metabolic demand. Humans have two isoforms: IMPDH2 filaments reduce sensitivity to feedback inhibition, while IMPDH1 assembly remains uncharacterized. IMPDH1 plays a unique role in retinal metabolism, and point mutants cause blindness. Here, in a series of cryogenic-electron microscopy structures we show that human IMPDH1 assembles polymorphic filaments with different assembly interfaces in extended and compressed states. Retina-specific splice variants introduce structural elements that reduce sensitivity to GTP inhibition, including stabilization of the extended filament form. Finally, we show that IMPDH1 disease mutations fall into two classes: one disrupts GTP regulation and the other has no effect on GTP regulation or filament assembly. These findings provide a foundation for understanding the role of IMPDH1 in retinal function and disease and demonstrate the diverse mechanisms by which metabolic enzyme filaments are allosterically regulated.
URI
ISSN
1545-9993
DOI
10.1038/s41594-021-00706-2
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