The kinetic analysis of the N-methylation of 4-phenylpyridine by nicotinamide N-methyltransferase: Evidence for a novel mechanism of substrate inhibition

Publication date

2018-05

Authors

van Haren, Matthijs J.ISNI 0000000436393010
Thomas, Martin G
Sartini, Davide
Barlow, David J
Ramsden, David B
Emanuelli, Monica
Klamt, Fábio
Martin, Nathaniel I.ISNI 0000000419429800
Parsons, Richard B

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The N-methylation of 4-phenylpyridine produces the neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP+). We investigated the kinetics of 4-phenylpyridine N-methylation by nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT) and its effect upon 4-phenylpyridine toxicity in vitro. Human recombinant NNMT possessed 4-phenylpyridine N-methyltransferase activity, with a specific activity of 1.7 ± 0.03 nmol MPP+ produced/h/mg NNMT. Although the Km for 4-phenylpyridine was similar to that reported for nicotinamide, its kcat of 9.3 × 10-5 ± 2 × 10-5 s-1 and specificity constant, kcat/Km, of 0.8 ± 0.8 s-1 M-1 were less than 0.15% of the respective values for nicotinamide, demonstrating that 4-phenylpyridine is a poor substrate for NNMT. At low (<2.5 mM) substrate concentration, 4-phenylpyridine N-methylation was competitively inhibited by dimethylsulphoxide, with a Ki of 34 ± 8 mM. At high (>2.5 mM) substrate concentration, enzyme activity followed substrate inhibition kinetics, with a Ki of 4 ± 1 mM. In silico molecular docking suggested that 4-phenylpyridine binds to the active site of NNMT in two non-redundant poses, one a substrate binding mode and the other an inhibitory mode. Finally, the expression of NNMT in the SH-SY5Y cell-line had no effect cell death, viability, ATP content or mitochondrial membrane potential. These data demonstrate that 4-phenylpyridine N-methylation by NNMT is unlikely to serve as a source of MPP+. The possibility for competitive inhibition by dimethylsulphoxide should be considered in NNMT-based drug discovery studies. The potential for 4-phenylpyridine to bind to the active site in two binding orientations using the same active site residues is a novel mechanism of substrate inhibition.

Keywords

Enzyme kinetics, Neurotoxicity, N-Methylation, Substrate inhibition, Substrate specificity, Taverne

Citation

van Haren, M J, Thomas, M G, Sartini, D, Barlow, D J, Ramsden, D B, Emanuelli, M, Klamt, F, Martin, N I & Parsons, R B 2018, 'The kinetic analysis of the N-methylation of 4-phenylpyridine by nicotinamide N-methyltransferase : Evidence for a novel mechanism of substrate inhibition', International Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, vol. 98, pp. 127-136. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocel.2018.03.010