Abstract

Penicillins and cephalosporins constitute a major class of clinically useful antibiotics. A key step in their biosynthesis involves the oxidative cyclisation of delta-(Lalpha-aminoadipoyl)-L-cysteinyl-D-valine to isopenicillin N by isopenicillin N synthase (IPNS). This chemically remarkable transformation has been extensively studied using substrate analogues. The conversion of an analogue in which the valine is replaced by alpha-aminobutyrate results in three products, two epimeric penams and a cepham. The ratio of these products in reactions catalysed by four different IPNS isozymes has been used previously to probe the thermicity of the chemical mechanism. But how IPNS restricts the products from the natural substrate to a single penam (isopenicillin N) has remained unknown. A key active-site residue, Leu223, identified according to a model of enzyme-substrate binding, has been altered to sterically less demanding residues. As the steric constraints on the upper part of the active site are reduced, the ratio of the beta-methyl penam to the cepham increases when the alpha-aminobutyrate-containing substrate analogue is used. These results suggest a mechanism for processing of the natural substrate in which IPNS uses steric control to restrict the conformational freedom of an intermediate such that the only product is the penam. Using steric pressure to control conformation, and hence to disfavour reactions leading to alternate products, is probably the result of evolutionary selection for a biologically active product at the expense of biologically inactive byproducts. It is likely that this sort of enzymatic catalysis is used in situations where substrate conversion is highly exothermic and a variety of products are possible.

Full Text
Paper version not known

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