Abstract

Sterol 14α-demethylases (CYP51s) are phylogenetically the most conserved cytochromes P450, and their three-step reaction is crucial for biosynthesis of sterols and serves as a leading target for clinical and agricultural antifungal agents. The structures of several (bacterial, protozoan, fungal, and human) CYP51 orthologs, in both the ligand-free and inhibitor-bound forms, have been determined and have revealed striking similarity at the secondary and tertiary structural levels, despite having low sequence identity. Moreover, in contrast to many of the substrate-promiscuous, drug-metabolizing P450s, CYP51 structures do not display substantial rearrangements in their backbones upon binding of various inhibitory ligands, essentially representing a snapshot of the ligand-free sterol 14α-demethylase. Here, using the obtusifoliol-bound I105F variant of Trypanosoma cruzi CYP51, we report that formation of the catalytically competent complex with the physiological substrate triggers a large-scale conformational switch, dramatically reshaping the enzyme active site (3.5-6.0 Å movements in the FG arm, HI arm, and helix C) in the direction of catalysis. Notably, our X-ray structural analyses revealed that the substrate channel closes, the proton delivery route opens, and the topology and electrostatic potential of the proximal surface reorganize to favor interaction with the electron-donating flavoprotein partner, NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. Site-directed mutagenesis of the amino acid residues involved in these events revealed a key role of active-site salt bridges in contributing to the structural dynamics that accompanies CYP51 function. Comparative analysis of apo-CYP51 and its sterol-bound complex provided key conceptual insights into the molecular mechanisms of CYP51 catalysis, functional conservation, lineage-specific substrate complementarity, and druggability differences.

Highlights

  • Sterol 14␣-demethylases (CYP51s) are phylogenetically the most conserved cytochromes P450, and their three-step reaction is crucial for biosynthesis of sterols and serves as a leading target for clinical and agricultural antifungal agents

  • The same experiments, demonstrated up to 10 Å movement in the enzyme FG arm (FЉ helix) in response to the binding of the substrate lanosterol, strongly suggesting that large-scale conformational dynamics must still be involved in CYP51 catalysis, and the evidence for this is provided for the first time in this study

  • In our experience, CYP51s from Trypanosoma brucei, Aspergillus fumigatus, and humans lost their substrates upon crystallization, with their heme iron returning to the low-spin water-bound state

Read more

Summary

Edited by Ruma Banerjee

Sterol 14␣-demethylases (CYP51s) are phylogenetically the most conserved cytochromes P450, and their three-step reaction is crucial for biosynthesis of sterols and serves as a leading target for clinical and agricultural antifungal agents. The structures display a striking similarity across phyla [10, 11] and do not reveal any substantial rearrangements in the protein backbone upon binding of inhibitors, either heterocycle-based (azoles [9, 11,12,13], pyridines [14]), or the substrate analog 14␣-methylenecyclopropyl-⌬7-24,25-dihydrolanosterol (MCP) [3] (Fig. S2) This lack of structural change led us to the hypothesis that the remarkable druggability of some pathogenic CYP51 (there are azoles that completely block their activity for extended periods of time when added at an equimolar ratio to the enzyme [5, 15]) must be somehow connected with high structural rigidity of the CYP51 active site [10]. The same experiments, demonstrated up to 10 Å movement in the enzyme FG arm (FЉ helix) in response to the binding of the substrate lanosterol, strongly suggesting that large-scale conformational dynamics must still be involved in CYP51 catalysis, and the evidence for this is provided for the first time in this study

Crystallization and structure determination
PDB code
Experimental procedures
Stability assay
Enzymatic activity assays
Substrate binding assays
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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.