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      Nanosecond Timescale Dynamics and Conformational Heterogeneity in Human Glucokinase Regulation and Disease

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          Abstract

          Human glucokinase (GCK) is the prototypic example of an emerging class of proteins with allosteric-like behavior that originates from intrinsic polypeptide dynamics. High-resolution NMR investigations of GCK have elucidated millisecond-timescale dynamics underlying allostery. In contrast, faster motions have remained underexplored, hindering the development of a comprehensive model of cooperativity. Here, we map nanosecond-timescale dynamics and structural heterogeneity in GCK using a combination of unnatural amino acid incorporation, time-resolved fluorescence, and 19 F nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. We find that a probe inserted within the enzyme’s intrinsically disordered loop samples multiple conformations in the unliganded state. Glucose binding and disease-associated mutations that suppress cooperativity alter the number and/or relative population of these states. Together, the nanosecond kinetics characterized here and the millisecond motions known to be essential for cooperativity provide a dynamical framework with which we address the origins of cooperativity and the mechanism of activated, hyperinsulinemia-associated, noncooperative variants.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Biophysical Journal
          Biophysical Journal
          Elsevier BV
          00063495
          January 2020
          January 2020
          Article
          10.1016/j.bpj.2019.12.036
          7063420
          32023434
          18a80e37-8b4c-41f8-ae95-0355105d3621
          © 2020

          https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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