Web Release Date: March 5,
Structural Studies on ADP Activation of Mammalian Glutamate Dehydrogenase and
the Evolution of Regulation



and
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. Louis, Missouri 63132, Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, and The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Endrocrinology Division, Room 410D, 3516 Civic Center Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Received December 9, 2002
Revised Manuscript Received January 27, 2003
Abstract:
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) is found in all organisms and catalyzes the reversible oxidative
deamination of L-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate. Unlike GDH from bacteria, mammalian GDH exhibits
negative cooperativity with respect to coenzyme, activation by ADP, and inhibition by GTP. Presented
here are the structures of apo bovine GDH, bovine GDH complexed with ADP, and the R463A mutant
form of human GDH (huGDH) that is insensitive to ADP activation. In the absence of active site ligands,
the catalytic cleft is in the open conformation, and the hexamers form long polymers in the crystal cell
with more interactions than found in the abortive complex crystals. This is consistent with the fact that
ADP promotes aggregation in solution. ADP is shown to bind to the second, inhibitory, NADH site yet
causes activation. The
-phosphates of the bound ADP interact with R459 (R463 in huGDH) on the pivot
helix. The structure of the ADP-resistant, R463A mutant of human GDH is identical to native GDH with
the exception of the truncated side chain on the pivot helix. Together, these results strongly suggest that
ADP activates by facilitating the opening of the catalytic cleft. From alignment of GDH from various
sources, it is likely that the antenna evolved in the protista prior to the formation of purine regulatory
sites. This suggests that there was some selective advantage of the antenna itself and that animals evolved
new functions for GDH through the addition of allosteric regulation.
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