β-Carotene alleviates substrate inhibition caused by asymmetric cooperativity

Jieren Liao (Shared First Author), Umar F. Shahul Hameed (Shared First Author), Timothy D. Hoffmann (Co-Author), Elisabeth Kurze (Co-Author), Guangxin Sun (Co-Author), Wieland Steinchen (Co-Author), Alessandro Nicoli (Co-Author), Antonella Di Pizio (Co-Author), Christina Kuttler (Co-Author), Chuankui Song (Co-Author), Dragana A.M. Catici (Co-Author), Farhah Assaad-Gerbert (Co-Author), Thomas Hoffmann (Co-Author), Stefan T. Arold (Co-Author), Wilfried G. Schwab* (Last Author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Enzymes are essential catalysts in biological systems. Substrate inhibition, once dismissed, is now observed in 20% of enzymes1 and is attributed to the formation of an unproductive enzyme-substrate complex, with no structural evidence of unproductivity provided to date1, 2, 3, 4, 5–6. This study uncovers the molecular mechanism of substrate inhibition in tobacco glucosyltransferase NbUGT72AY1, which transfers glucose to phenols for plant protection. The peculiarity that β-carotene strongly attenuates the substrate inhibition of NbUGT72AY1, despite being a competitive inhibitor, allows to determine the conformational changes that occur during substrate binding in both active and substrate-inhibited complexes. Crystallography reveals structurally different ternary enzyme-substrate complexes that do not conform to classical mechanisms. An alternative pathway suggests substrates bind randomly, but the reaction occurs only if a specific order is followed (asymmetric cooperativity). This unreported paradigm explains substrate inhibition and reactivation by competitive inhibitors, opening new research avenues in metabolic regulation and industrial applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3065
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 29 Mar 2025

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'β-Carotene alleviates substrate inhibition caused by asymmetric cooperativity'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this