Authors
Christos S Karamitros, Kyle Murray, Yoichi Kumada, Kenneth A Johnson, Sheena D’Arcy, George Georgiou
First author
Christos S Karamitros
Corresponding author
George Georgiou
Publication Style
Journal name Nature Communications
Year
Volume, issue, pages
15, 1, 7068
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.