Abstract

Metalloenzymes are ubiquitous in nature catalyzing a number of crucial biochemical processes in animal and plant kingdoms. For better adaptation to the relative abundance of different metal ions in different cellular fluids, many of these enzymes exhibit metal promiscuity. The microbial enzyme DapE, an essential enzyme for bacterial growth and survival and a potentially safe target for antibiotics, continues to show enzyme activity when the two zinc ions in its active site are replaced by other transition metal ions. The effect of metal-ion substitution at the second metal-binding site of DapE on its substrate affinity and catalytic efficiency is investigated by QM/MM treatment of the enzyme-substrate complex, by modelling the enzyme with Mn(II), Co(II), Ni(II), or Cu(II) ion in place of Zn(II) at its second metal-binding site, while retaining Zn(II) ion at the first metal-binding site. On the basis of substrate binding energy and activation energy barrier for the chemical catalysis, it is found that Zn-Mn DapE shows poor binding affinity as well as inefficient chemical catalysis. Although Zn-Cu and Zn-Ni DapEs show activation energy barriers comparable to that of wild-type Zn-Zn DapE, their weaker substrate affinity renders these mixed-metal enzymes less efficient. On the other hand, Zn-Co DapE is found to outperform the naturally occurring Zn-Zn DapE, both in terms of substrate affinity and chemical catalysis. The observed metal promiscuity may have played an important role in the survival of bacteria even in those cellular media where Zn ions are in limited supply. Metal nonspecificity in the catalysis of DapE enzyme allows bacteria to thrive in different cellular media.

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