Abstract

Protein dynamics are crucial for realizing the catalytic power of enzymes, but how enzymes have evolved to achieve catalysis is unknown. The light-activated enzyme protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) catalyzes sequential hydride and proton transfers in the photoexcited and ground states, respectively, and is an excellent system for relating the effects of motions to catalysis. Here, we have used the temperature dependence of isotope effects and solvent viscosity measurements to analyze the dynamics coupled to the hydride and proton transfer steps in three cyanobacterial PORs and a related plant enzyme. We have related the dynamic profiles of each enzyme to their evolutionary origin. Motions coupled to light-driven hydride transfer are conserved across all POR enzymes, but those linked to thermally activated proton transfer are variable. Cyanobacterial PORs require complex and solvent-coupled dynamic networks to optimize the proton donor-acceptor distance, but evolutionary pressures appear to have minimized such networks in plant PORs. POR from Gloeobacter violaceus has features of both the cyanobacterial and plant enzymes, suggesting that the dynamic properties have been optimized during the evolution of POR. We infer that the differing trajectories in optimizing a catalytic structure are related to the stringency of the chemistry catalyzed and define a functional adaptation in which active site chemistry is protected from the dynamic effects of distal mutations that might otherwise impact negatively on enzyme catalysis.

Highlights

  • Research Fellow and recipient of a Royal Society Wolfson merit award

  • Tein dynamics can be acquired only by considering functional differences between enzymes from species that span the evolutionary time scale. We have studied this problem in the light-activated enzyme protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR3; EC 1.3.1.33), which is an excellent system for relating the effects of motions to catalysis in the context of proton and hydride transfer chemistry [11, 12]

  • When stringency is less, multiple structural and dynamic solutions are possible, and optimization of the reaction chemistry is achieved by evolution to minimize the reliance on complex dynamic networks and coupling to solvent dynamics (Fig. 5B)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Research Fellow and recipient of a Royal Society Wolfson merit award. To whom correspondence may be addressed. Isotope effects, and temperature dependences (⌬⌬H‡) of the hydride and proton transfer steps for the various POR enzymes Conserved Localized Dynamics Control Hydride Transfer—To understand how these structural differences have influenced motions coupled to the hydride and proton transfers, we studied the catalytic mechanism and associated protein dynamics of different PORs from a variety of organisms.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call