Mechanistic conformational and substrate selectivity profiles emerging in the evolution of enzymes via parallel trajectories

Nat Commun. 2024 Aug 16;15(1):7068. doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-51133-y.

Abstract

Laboratory evolution studies have demonstrated that parallel evolutionary trajectories can lead to genetically distinct enzymes with high activity towards a non-preferred substrate. However, it is unknown whether such enzymes have convergent conformational dynamics and mechanistic features. To address this question, we use as a model the wild-type Homo sapiens kynureninase (HsKYNase), which is of great interest for cancer immunotherapy. Earlier, we isolated HsKYNase_66 through an unusual evolutionary trajectory, having a 410-fold increase in the kcat/KM for kynurenine (KYN) and reverse substrate selectivity relative to HsKYNase. Here, by following a different evolutionary trajectory we generate a genetically distinct variant, HsKYNase_93D9, that exhibits KYN catalytic activity comparable to that of HsKYNase_66, but instead it is a "generalist" that accepts 3'-hydroxykynurenine (OH-KYN) with the same proficiency. Pre-steady-state kinetic analysis reveals that while the evolution of HsKYNase_66 is accompanied by a change in the rate-determining step of the reactions, HsKYNase_93D9 retains the same catalytic mechanism as HsKYNase. HDX-MS shows that the conformational dynamics of the two enzymes are markedly different and distinct from ortholog prokaryotic enzymes with high KYN activity. Our work provides a mechanistic framework for understanding the relationship between evolutionary mechanisms and phenotypic traits of evolved generalist and specialist enzyme species.

MeSH terms

  • Evolution, Molecular*
  • Humans
  • Hydrolases* / chemistry
  • Hydrolases* / genetics
  • Hydrolases* / metabolism
  • Kinetics
  • Kynurenine* / chemistry
  • Kynurenine* / metabolism
  • Protein Conformation
  • Substrate Specificity

Substances

  • Hydrolases
  • Kynurenine
  • kynureninase