Abstract

How cobalamin-dependent enzymes promote C–Co homolysis to initiate radical catalysis has been debated extensively. For the pyridoxal 5′-phosphate and cobalamin-dependent enzymes lysine 5,6-aminomutase and ornithine 4,5-aminomutase (OAM), large-scale re-orientation of the cobalamin-binding domain linked to C–Co bond breakage has been proposed. In these models, substrate binding triggers dynamic sampling of the B12-binding Rossmann domain to achieve a catalytically competent ‘closed’ conformational state. In ‘closed’ conformations of OAM, Glu338 is thought to facilitate C–Co bond breakage by close association with the cobalamin adenosyl group. We investigated this using stopped-flow continuous-wave photolysis, viscosity dependence kinetic measurements, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of a series of Glu338 variants. We found that substrate-induced C–Co bond homolysis is compromised in Glu388 variant forms of OAM, although photolysis of the C–Co bond is not affected by the identity of residue 338. Electrostatic interactions of Glu338 with the 5′-deoxyadenosyl group of B12 potentiate C–Co bond homolysis in ‘closed’ conformations only; these conformations are unlocked by substrate binding. Our studies extend earlier models that identified a requirement for large-scale motion of the cobalamin domain. Our findings indicate that large-scale motion is required to pre-organize the active site by enabling transient formation of ‘closed’ conformations of OAM. In ‘closed’ conformations, Glu338 interacts with the 5′-deoxyadenosyl group of cobalamin. This interaction is required to potentiate C–Co homolysis, and is a crucial component of the approximately 1012 rate enhancement achieved by cobalamin-dependent enzymes for C–Co bond homolysis.

Highlights

  • In biology, reactions catalysed by B12-dependent enzymes are amongst the most unusual and complex in terms of activation energy requirements for homolysis of the organometallic C–Co bond [1,2,3]

  • We have shown that C–Co bond homolysis is initiated from a closed conformation, and is accelerated through the presence of an active-site electrostatic triggering residue Glu338

  • Bond homolysis is coupled to conformational sampling between ‘open’ and ‘closed’ states, even when the electrostatic trigger is removed by site-directed mutagenesis

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Summary

Introduction

Reactions catalysed by B12-dependent enzymes are amongst the most unusual and complex in terms of activation energy requirements for homolysis of the organometallic C–Co bond [1,2,3]. Previous studies on OAM showed that any substitution at the Glu338 residue decreases the C–Co bond homolysis rate due to weakening of electrostatic interactions, the exact role and involvement of Glu338 in the large-scale dynamics and in conformational sampling leading to C–Co bond homolysis were unexplored [36] We studied this using a combination of steady-state and stoppedflow kinetic methods, EPR spectroscopy and continuous-wave (CW) photolysis of C–Co bond homolysis as a function of solution viscosity dependence. Our work places Glu338 at the core of the dynamic/electrostatic model proposed based on structural analysis of the open conformation of OAM and subsequent computational simulations of active-site closure It provides a mechanistic structural framework for understanding the approximately 1012-fold enhanced rate of AdoCbl C–Co bond homolysis in enzyme systems

Results and Discussion
Concluding remarks
Experimental procedures
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