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Dive into the research topics where Víctor Castro-Fernández is active.

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Featured researches published by Víctor Castro-Fernández.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Crystal structure, SAXS and kinetic mechanism of hyperthermophilic ADP-dependent glucokinase from Thermococcus litoralis reveal a conserved mechanism for catalysis.

Jaime Andrés Rivas-Pardo; Alejandra Herrera-Morande; Víctor Castro-Fernández; Francisco J. Fernández; M. Cristina Vega; Victoria Guixé

ADP-dependent glucokinases represent a unique family of kinases that belong to the ribokinase superfamily, being present mainly in hyperthermophilic archaea. For these enzymes there is no agreement about the magnitude of the structural transitions associated with ligand binding and whether they are meaningful to the function of the enzyme. We used the ADP-dependent glucokinase from Termococcus litoralis as a model to investigate the conformational changes observed in X-ray crystallographic structures upon substrate binding and to compare them with those determined in solution in order to understand their interplay with the glucokinase function. Initial velocity studies indicate that catalysis follows a sequential ordered mechanism that correlates with the structural transitions experienced by the enzyme in solution and in the crystal state. The combined data allowed us to resolve the open-closed conformational transition that accounts for the complete reaction cycle and to identify the corresponding clusters of aminoacids residues responsible for it. These results provide molecular bases for a general mechanism conserved across the ADP-dependent kinase family.


FEBS Journal | 2014

Bifunctional ADP‐dependent phosphofructokinase/glucokinase activity in the order Methanococcales – biochemical characterization of the mesophilic enzyme from Methanococcus maripaludis

Víctor Castro-Fernández; Felipe Bravo‐Moraga; Alejandra Herrera-Morande; Victoria Guixé

In some archaea, the phosphorylation of glucose and fructose 6‐phosphate (fructose 6P) is carried out by enzymes that are specific for either substrate and that use ADP as phosphoryl donor. In the hyperthermophilic archaeon Methanocaldococcus jannaschii, a bifunctional enzyme able to phosphorylate glucose and fructose 6P has been described. To determine whether the ability to phosphorylate both glucose and fructose 6P is a common feature for all enzymes of the order Methanococcales, we expressed, purified and characterized the unique homologous protein of the mesophilic archaea Methanococcus maripaludis. Assay of the enzyme activity with different sugars, metals and nucleotides allows us to conclude that the enzyme is able to phosphorylate both fructose 6P and glucose in the presence of ADP and a divalent metal cation. Kinetic characterization of the enzyme revealed complex regulation by the free Mg2+ concentration and AMP, with the latter appearing to be a key metabolite. To determine whether this enzyme could have a role in gluconeogenesis, we evaluated the reversibility of both reactions and found that glucokinase activity is reversible, whereas phosphofructokinase activity is not. To determine the important residues for glucose and fructose 6P binding, we modeled the bifunctional phosphofructokinase/glucokinase enzyme from M. maripaludis and its interactions with both sugar substrates using protein–ligand docking. Comparison of the active site of the phosphofructokinase/glucokinase enzyme from M. maripaludis with the structural models constructed for all the homology sequences present in the order Methanococcales shows that all of the ADP‐dependent kinases from this order would be able to phosphorylate glucose and fructose 6P, which rules out the current annotation of these enzymes as specific phosphofructokinases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

Reconstructed ancestral enzymes reveal that negative selection drove the evolution of substrate specificity in ADP-dependent kinases

Víctor Castro-Fernández; Alejandra Herrera-Morande; Ricardo A. Zamora; Felipe Merino; Felipe Gonzalez-Ordenes; Felipe Padilla-Salinas; Humberto M. Pereira; J. Brandao-Neto; Richard C. Garratt; Victoria Guixé

One central goal in molecular evolution is to pinpoint the mechanisms and evolutionary forces that cause an enzyme to change its substrate specificity; however, these processes remain largely unexplored. Using the glycolytic ADP-dependent kinases of archaea, including the orders Thermococcales, Methanosarcinales, and Methanococcales, as a model and employing an approach involving paleoenzymology, evolutionary statistics, and protein structural analysis, we could track changes in substrate specificity during ADP-dependent kinase evolution along with the structural determinants of these changes. To do so, we studied five key resurrected ancestral enzymes as well as their extant counterparts. We found that a major shift in function from a bifunctional ancestor that could phosphorylate either glucose or fructose 6-phosphate (fructose-6-P) as a substrate to a fructose 6-P-specific enzyme was started by a single amino acid substitution resulting in negative selection with a ground-state mode against glucose and a subsequent 1,600-fold change in specificity of the ancestral protein. This change rendered the residual phosphorylation of glucose a promiscuous and physiologically irrelevant activity, highlighting how promiscuity may be an evolutionary vestige of ancestral enzyme activities, which have been eliminated over time. We also could reconstruct the evolutionary history of substrate utilization by using an evolutionary model of discrete binary characters, indicating that substrate uses can be discretely lost or acquired during enzyme evolution. These findings exemplify how negative selection and subtle enzyme changes can lead to major evolutionary shifts in function, which can subsequently generate important adaptive advantages, for example, in improving glycolytic efficiency in Thermococcales.


FEBS Letters | 2014

Emergence of pyridoxal phosphorylation through a promiscuous ancestor during the evolution of hydroxymethyl pyrimidine kinases.

Víctor Castro-Fernández; Felipe Bravo‐Moraga; César A. Ramírez-Sarmiento; Victoria Guixé

In the family of ATP‐dependent vitamin kinases, several bifunctional enzymes that phosphorylate hydroxymethyl pyrimidine (HMP) and pyridoxal (PL) have been described besides enzymes specific towards HMP. To determine how bifunctionality emerged, we reconstructed the sequence of three ancestors of HMP kinases, experimentally resurrected, and assayed the enzymatic activity of their last common ancestor. The latter has ∼8‐fold higher specificity for HMP due to a glutamine residue (Gln44) that is a key determinant of the specificity towards HMP, although it is capable of phosphorylating both substrates. These results show how a specific enzyme with catalytic promiscuity gave rise to current bifunctional enzymes.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2017

ADP-dependent phosphofructokinases from the archaeal order Methanosarcinales display redundant glucokinase activity

Ricardo A. Zamora; Felipe Gonzalez-Ordenes; Víctor Castro-Fernández; Victoria Guixé

The genome of Methanosarcinales organisms presents both ADP-dependent glucokinase and phosphofructokinase genes. However, Methanococcoides burtonii has a truncate glucokinase gene with a large deletion at the C-terminal, where the catalytic GXGD motif is located. Characterization of its phosphofructokinase annotated protein shows that is a bifunctional enzyme able to supply the absence of the glucokinase activity. Moreover, kinetic analyses of the phosphofructokinase annotated enzyme from, Methanohalobium evestigatum demonstrated that this enzyme is also bifunctional. The high conservation of the active site residues of all the enzymes from the order Methanosarcinales suggest that they should be bifunctional, as was previously reported for the ADP-dependent kinases from Methanococcales, highlighting the redundancy of the glucokinase activity in this archaeal group. The presence of active glycolytic enzymes would be important when glycogen storage of these organisms needs to be degraded to be used as energy source. Kinetic and structural information allows us to establish a substrate specificity signature that identifies specific GK or PFK, and bifunctional enzymes in this family.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2016

Structural and functional analysis of the ASM p.Ala359Asp mutant that causes acid sphingomyelinase deficiency.

Mariana Acuña; Víctor Castro-Fernández; Mauricio Latorre; Juan Castro; Edward H. Schuchman; Victoria Guixé; Mauricio González; Silvana Zanlungo

Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) type A and B are recessive hereditary disorders caused by deficiency in acid sphingomyelinase (ASM). The p.Ala359Asp mutation has been described in several patients but its functional and structural effects in the protein are unknown. In order to characterize this mutation, we modeled the three-dimensional ASM structure using the recent available crystal of the mammalian ASM as a template. We found that the p.Ala359Asp mutation is localized in the hydrophobic core and far from the sphingomyelin binding site. However, energy function calculations using statistical potentials indicate that the mutation causes a decrease in ASM stability. Therefore, we investigated the functional effect of the p.Ala359Asp mutation in ASM expression, secretion, localization and activity in human fibroblasts. We found a 3.8% residual ASM activity compared to the wild-type enzyme, without changes in the other parameters evaluated. These results support the hypothesis that the p.Ala359Asp mutation causes structural alterations in the hydrophobic environment where ASM is located, decreasing its enzymatic activity. A similar effect was observed in other previously described NPDB mutations located outside the active site of the enzyme. This work shows the first full size ASM mutant model describe at date, providing a complete analysis of the structural and functional effects of the p.Ala359Asp mutation over the stability and activity of the enzyme.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018

ADP-dependent kinases from the archaeal order Methanosarcinales adapt to salt by a non-canonical evolutionarily conserved strategy

Felipe Gonzalez-Ordenes; Pablo Cea; Nicolás Fuentes-Ugarte; Sebastián M. Muñoz; Ricardo A. Zamora; Diego A. Leonardo; Richard C. Garratt; Víctor Castro-Fernández; Victoria Guixé

Halophilic organisms inhabit hypersaline environments where the extreme ionic conditions and osmotic pressure have driven the evolution of molecular adaptation mechanisms. Understanding such mechanisms is limited by the common difficulties encountered in cultivating such organisms. Within the Euryarchaeota, for example, only the Halobacteria and the order Methanosarcinales include readily cultivable halophilic species. Furthermore, only the former have been extensively studied in terms of their component proteins. Here, in order to redress this imbalance, we investigate the halophilic adaptation of glycolytic enzymes from the ADP-dependent phosphofructokinase/glucokinase family (ADP-PFK/GK) derived from organisms of the order Methanosarcinales. Structural analysis of proteins from non-halophilic and halophilic Methanosarcinales shows an almost identical composition and distribution of amino acids on both the surface and within the core. However, these differ from those observed in Halobacteria or Eukarya. Proteins from Methanosarcinales display a remarkable increase in surface lysine content and have no reduction to the hydrophobic core, contrary to the features ubiquitously observed in Halobacteria and which are thought to be the main features responsible for their halophilic properties. Biochemical characterization of recombinant ADP-PFK/GK from M. evestigatum (halophilic) and M. mazei (non-halophilic) shows the activity of both these extant enzymes to be only moderately inhibited by salt. Nonetheless, its activity over time is notoriously stabilized by salt. Furthermore, glycine betaine has a protective effect against KCl inhibition and enhances the thermal stability of both enzymes. The resurrection of the last common ancestor of ADP-PFK/GK from Methanosarcinales shows that the ancestral enzyme displays an extremely high salt tolerance and thermal stability. Structure determination of the ancestral protein reveals unique traits such as an increase in the Lys and Glu content at the protein surface and yet no reduction to the volume of the hydrophobic core. Our results suggest that the halophilic character is an ancient trait in the evolution of this protein family and that proteins from Methanosarcinales have adapted to highly saline environments by a non-canonical strategy, different from that currently proposed for Halobacteria. These results open up new avenues for the search and development of novel salt tolerant biocatalysts.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

Protein topology determines substrate-binding mechanism in homologous enzymes

Alejandra Herrera-Morande; Víctor Castro-Fernández; Felipe Merino; César A. Ramírez-Sarmiento; Francisco J. Fernández; M. Cristina Vega; Victoria Guixé

During evolution, some homologs proteins appear with different connectivity between secondary structures (different topology) but conserving the tridimensional arrangement of them (same architecture). These events can produce two types of arrangements; circular permutation or non-cyclic permutations. The first one results in the N and C terminus transferring to a different position on a protein sequence while the second refers to a more complex arrangement of the structural elements. In ribokinase superfamily, two different topologies can be identified, which are related to each other as a non-cyclic permutation occurred during the evolution. Interestingly, this change in topology is correlated with the nucleotide specificity of its members. Thereby, the connectivity of the secondary elements allows us to distinguish an ATP-dependent and an ADP-dependent topology. Here we address the impact of introducing the topology of a homologous ATP-dependent kinase in an ADP-dependent kinase (Thermococcus litoralis glucokinase) in the structure, nucleotide specificity, and substrate binding order of the engineered enzyme. Structural evidence demonstrates that rewiring the topology of TlGK leads to an active and soluble enzyme without modifications on its three-dimensional architecture. The permuted enzyme (PerGK) retains the nucleotide preference of the parent TlGK enzyme but shows a change in the substrate binding order. Our results illustrate how the rearrangement of the protein folding topology during the evolution of the ribokinase superfamily enzymes may have dictated the substrate-binding order in homologous enzymes of this superfamily.


FEBS Journal | 2017

Unusual dimerization of a BcCsp mutant leads to reduced conformational dynamics.

Alonso Izzat Carvajal; Gabriel Vallejos; Elizabeth A. Komives; Víctor Castro-Fernández; Diego A. Leonardo; Richard C. Garratt; César A. Ramírez-Sarmiento; Jorge Babul

Cold shock proteins (Csp) constitute a family of ubiquitous small proteins that act as RNA‐chaperones to avoid cold‐induced termination of translation. All members contain two subdomains composed of 2 and 3 β‐strands, respectively, which are connected by a hinge loop and fold into a β‐barrel. Bacillus caldolyticus Csp (BcCsp) is one of the most studied members of the family in terms of its folding, function, and structure. This protein has been described as a monomer in solution, although a recent crystal structure showed dimerization via domain swapping (DS). In contrast, other cold shock proteins of the same fold are known to dimerize in a nonswapped arrangement. Hypothesizing that reducing the size of the hinge loop may promote swapping as in several other DS proteins with different folds we deleted two residues from these region (BcCsp∆36‐37), leading to a protein in monomer–dimer equilibrium with similar folding stability to that of the wild‐type. Strikingly, the crystal structure of BcCsp∆36‐37 revealed a nonswapped dimer with its interface located at the nucleic acid‐binding surface, showing that the deletion led to structural consequences far from the perturbation site. Concomitantly, circular dichroism experiments on BcCsp∆36‐37 demonstrated that binding of the oligonucleotide hexathymidine disrupts the dimer. Additionally, HDXMS shows a protective effect on the protein structure upon dimerization, where the resulting interactions between ligand‐binding surfaces in the dimer reduced the extent of exchange throughout the whole protein. Our work provides evidence of the complex interplay between conformational dynamics, deletions, and oligomerization within the Csp protein family.


Archive | 2017

Evolution, Metabolism and Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Extreme Adaptation of Euryarchaeota and Its Biotechnological Potential

Víctor Castro-Fernández; Ricardo A. Zamora; Alejandra Herrera-Morande; Gabriel Vallejos; Felipe Gonzalez-Ordenes; VictoriaGuixé

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