Abstract

Cytochromes P450 (P450s) are nature's catalysts of choice for performing demanding and physiologically vital oxidation reactions. Biochemical characterization of these enzymes over the past decades has provided detailed mechanistic insight and highlighted the diversity of substrates P450s accommodate and the spectrum of oxidative transformations they catalyze. Previously, we discovered that the bacterial P450 MycCI from the mycinamicin biosynthetic pathway in Micromonospora griseorubida possesses an unusually broad substrate scope, whereas the homologous P450 from tylosin-producing Streptomyces fradiae (TylHI) exhibits a high degree of specificity for its native substrate. Here, using biochemical, structural, and computational approaches, we aimed to understand the molecular basis for the disparate reactivity profiles of these two P450s. Turnover and equilibrium binding experiments with substrate analogs revealed that TylHI strictly prefers 16-membered ring macrolides bearing the deoxyamino sugar mycaminose. To help rationalize these results, we solved the X-ray crystal structure of TylHI in complex with its native substrate at 1.99-Å resolution and assayed several site-directed mutants. We also conducted molecular dynamics simulations of TylHI and MycCI and biochemically characterized a third P450 homolog from the chalcomycin biosynthetic pathway in Streptomyces bikiniensis These studies provided a basis for constructing P450 chimeras to gain further insight into the features dictating the differences in reaction profile among these structurally and functionally related enzymes, ultimately unveiling the central roles of key loop regions in influencing substrate binding and turnover. Our work highlights the complex nature of P450/substrate interactions and raises interesting questions regarding the evolution of functional diversity among biosynthetic enzymes.

Highlights

  • Cytochromes P450 enzymes (P450s) (P450s) are nature’s catalysts of choice for performing demanding and physiologically vital oxidation reactions

  • In our previous studies describing the catalytic versatility of MycCI, we found that its homolog TylHI possessed a comparatively restricted substrate scope [35]

  • We sought to gain an understanding of the specific factors governing the divergence in catalytic activity of two homologous cytochromes P450 involved in the biosynthesis of related 16-membered ring macrolide antibiotics

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Summary

Introduction

Cytochromes P450 (P450s) are nature’s catalysts of choice for performing demanding and physiologically vital oxidation reactions Biochemical characterization of these enzymes over the past decades has provided detailed mechanistic insight and highlighted the diversity of substrates P450s accommodate and the spectrum of oxidative transformations they catalyze. We conducted molecular dynamics simulations of TylHI and MycCI and biochemically characterized a third P450 homolog from the chalcomycin biosynthetic pathway in Streptomyces bikiniensis These studies provided a basis for constructing P450 chimeras to gain further insight into the features dictating the differences in reaction profile among these structurally and functionally. Our work highlights the complex nature of P450/substrate interactions and raises interesting questions regarding the evolution of functional diversity among biosynthetic enzymes. P450s play critical roles in cellular metabolism, ranging from xenobiotic metabolism in humans to secondary metabolite biosynthesis in plants, fungi, and bacteria

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