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Creatine Kinase Amy Ward Overview Metabolism Creatine Kinase Isoforms ATP Recycling Clinical Relevance Metabolism ATP is the energy currency in the cell Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria Muscle and brain are most actively metabolizing tissues ATP as Energy Source ATP donates high energy bond in coupled reactions Substrate ATP Product ADP ATP Recycling Creatine kinase catalyzes transfer of phosphate from N-phosphoryl creatine (PCr) to ADP Energy homeostasis PCr Cr ADP ATP Creatine Kinase Crystallization attempts date back to 1950s First successful crystal formed in 1996 Creatine Kinase Different isoforms depending on location Coupled to sites of energy production or consumption CK Isoforms Cytosolic Isoforms Muscle-type Brain-type Exist as dimers Temporal energy buffering Mitochondrial Isoforms Exist in dimer-octamer equilibrium Spatial energy buffering Cytosolic Isoforms Subunits: M and B Dimeric isoenzymes in cytosol (85 kDa): MM (muscle-type) BB (brain-type) MB hybrid Cytosolic Isoforms Function as a temporal energy buffer ADP + PCr ATP + Cr Coupled to: Glycolysis Actin-myosin system Temporal Energy Buffering Muscle-Type CK: Monomer Small N domain Large C domain Muscle-Type CK Muscle-Type CK: Dimer Monomer-monomer interface site highly conserved All isoenzymes have: 4 Trp sites 4 Cys sites Muscle-Type CK MM-CK bound to Mband in myofibril Cardiac tissue: 50% of CK action Muscle-type CK CK maintains high ATP concentration Muscle-Type CK Mutation in CK genes linked to myocardial infarction Heart diseases linked to low levels of CK Brain-Type CK Structure very similar to Muscle-Type CK Most tissues contain MB and BB types High levels in brain, retina, and sperm BB form is the precursor for the other two BB MB MM Brain-Type CK CK levels associated with learning processes CK overexpressed in tumours Decreased CK neurodegeneration Mitochondrial CK Bound to outside of inner membrane within cristae Form microcompartments with porins Mitochondrial CK Transphosphorylation Cr enters through pore Cr + ATP PCr + ADP PCr exits through pore PCr mediates between sites of ATP consumption and production Spatial Energy Buffering Mitochondrial CK Mi-CK: Structure Mi-CK: Monomer Small (residues 1-112) N-terminal domain Large (residues 113-380) C-terminal domain ATP binding site located in the cleft between the two domains Mi-CK: Dimer Trp residues Trp 206: monomermonomer contact Trp 264 & Nterminal: octamer forming Mi-CK: Octamer stable against denaturation insensitive to proteolysis Dissociation to dimer takes hours to weeks Accelerated with addition of transition state analogue, TSAC = creatine, MgADP & nitrate Mi-CK: Structure Mi-CK fold differs from all other kinases Structures of Mi-CK-ATP and free enzyme very similar Mi-CK: Structure Active site residues: Phosphate groups of ATP interact with Arg residues 125, 127, 287, 315 Cys278: substrate binding His61: mutation impairs enzyme activity Loop residues 60-65 moves toward active site for catalysis Trp223: crucial for catalysis Mi-CK: Octameric Structure Mi-CK: Octameric Structure ATP Recycling The PCr circuit: Spatial separation of ATP consumption and synthesis Mitochondrial VS Cytosolic CK Very similar structures and structural elements Mi-CK evolved different folding pattern for catalyzing phosphoryl transfer Allow compartmentalization of function References 1. Wallimann T et al. 1998. Some new aspects of creatine kinase (CK): compartmentation, structure, function and regulation for cellular and mitochondrial bioenergetics and physiology. Biofactors 8, 229-234. 2. Schlattner U et al. 1998. Functional aspects of the X-ray structure of mitochondrial creatine kinase: A molecular physiology approach. Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry 184, 125140. 3. Yamamichi H et al. 2001. Creatine kinase gene mutation in a patient with muscle creatine kinase deficiency. Clinical Chemistry 47, 1967-1973. 4. Alberts B et al. 1994. Molecular Biology of the Cell, 3rd edition. New York: Garland Publishing. 5. Lipskaya TY. 2000. The physiological role of the creatine kinase system: evolution of views. Biochemistry (Moscow) 66, 115-129.