TL;DR: Structural and other similarities support proposals that GCT, like the synthetases, catalyzes nucleotidyl transfer by stabilizing a pentavalent transition state at the alpha-phosphate of CTP.
TL;DR: Using NMR to study the allosteric mechanism of this enzyme, widespread chemical shift changes for the individual CTP binding steps are observed, suggesting that a fraction of the free energy of negative cooperativity is entropic in origin.
Abstract: The dimeric enzyme CTP:glycerol-3-phosphate cytidylyltransferase (GCT) displays strong negative cooperativity between the first and second binding of its substrate, CTP. Using NMR to study the allosteric mechanism of this enzyme, we observe widespread chemical shift changes for the individual CTP binding steps. Mapping these changes onto the molecular structure allowed the formulation of a detailed model of allosteric conformational change. Upon the second step of ligand binding, NMR experiments indicate an extensive loss of conformational exchange broadening of the backbone resonances of GCT. This suggests that a fraction of the free energy of negative cooperativity is entropic in origin.
TL;DR: Equilibrium dialysis studies reveal that cytidine triphosphate binds to a total of six sites on native aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase) from E. coli, suggesting that there are two discrete classes of CTP binding sites on each native ATCase molecule.
TL;DR: Although many of the properties of the two enzymes are quite similar, significant differences do exist, suggesting that both enzymes probably acted on the same tRNA population.
TL;DR: The location of the first seven residues of the Regulatory chain has been identified for the first time in a refined ATCase crystal structure, and the proximity of this portion of the regulatory chain to the allosteric site suggests a potential role for these residues in nucleotide binding to the enzyme.