Site‐Directed Mutagenesis Studies on the Toluene Dioxygenase Enzymatic System: Role of Phenylalanine 366, Threonine 365 and Isoleucine 324 in the Chemo‐, Regio‐, and Stereoselectivity
Abstract Toluene Dioxygenase (TDO) enzymatic complex has been widely used as a biocatalyst for the regio‐ and enantioselective preparation of cis‐cyclohexadienediols, which are very important starting materials for organic synthesis. However, the lack of regio‐ and stereodiversity of the dioxygenation process by TDO and related dioxygenases constitutes a clear drawback when planning the use of these diols in synthetic schemes. In this work, we developed three TDO mutants in residues phenylalanine 366, threonine 365 and isoleucine 324, with the aim to alter the chemo‐, regio‐ and stereoselectivity of the biotransformation of arenes. While no changes in the regioselectivity of the process were observed, dramatic variations in the chemo‐ and enantioselectivity were found for mutants I324F, T365N and F366 V in a substrate‐dependent manner.magnified image
- Research Article
66
- 10.1038/emboj.2009.184
- Jul 2, 2009
- The EMBO Journal
Immune protection by the complement system critically depends on assembly of C3 convertases on the surface of pathogens and altered host cells. These short-lived protease complexes are formed through pro-convertases, which for the alternative pathway consist of the complement component C3b and the pro-enzyme factor B (FB). Here, we present the crystal structure at 2.2-A resolution, small-angle X-ray scattering and electron microscopy (EM) data of the pro-convertase formed by human FB and cobra venom factor (CVF), a potent homologue of C3b that generates more stable convertases. FB is loaded onto CVF through its pro-peptide Ba segment by specific contacts, which explain the specificity for the homologous C3b over the native C3 and inactive products iC3b and C3c. The protease segment Bb binds the carboxy terminus of CVF through the metal-ion dependent adhesion site of the Von Willebrand factor A-type domain. A possible dynamic equilibrium between a 'loading' and 'activation' state of the pro-convertase may explain the observed difference between the crystal structure of CVFB and the EM structure of C3bB. These insights into formation of convertases provide a basis for further development of complement therapeutics.
- Research Article
116
- 10.1016/j.chembiol.2004.10.013
- Jan 1, 2005
- Chemistry & Biology
Specificity and Affinity of Natural Product Cyclopentapeptide Inhibitors against A. fumigatus, Human, and Bacterial Chitinases
- Research Article
30
- 10.1074/jbc.m210649200
- Jan 1, 2003
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (SHMT; EC 2.1.2.1) catalyzes the reversible interconversion of serine and glycine with transfer of the serine side chain one-carbon group to tetrahydropteroylglutamate (H(4)PteGlu), and also the conversion of 5,10-methenyl-H(4)PteGlu to 5-formyl-H(4)PteGlu. In the cell, H(4)PteGlu carries a poly-gamma-glutamyl tail of at least 3 glutamyl residues that is required for physiological activity. This study combines solution binding and mutagenesis studies with crystallographic structure determination to identify the extended binding site for tetrahydropteroylpolyglutamate on rabbit cytosolic SHMT. Equilibrium binding and kinetic measurements of H(4)PteGlu(3) and H(4)PteGlu(5) with wild-type and Lys --> Gln or Glu site mutant homotetrameric rabbit cytosolic SHMTs identified lysine residues that contribute to the binding of the polyglutamate tail. The crystal structure of the enzyme in complex with 5-formyl-H(4)PteGlu(3) confirms the solution data and indicates that the conformation of the pteridine ring and its interactions with the enzyme differ slightly from those observed in complexes of the monoglutamate cofactor. The polyglutamate chain, which does not contribute to catalysis, exists in multiple conformations in each of the two occupied binding sites and appears to be bound by the electrostatic field created by the cationic residues, with only limited interactions with specific individual residues.
- Research Article
68
- 10.1074/jbc.m113.525295
- Jan 3, 2014
- The Journal of Biological Chemistry
The microbial degradation of the plant cell wall is an important biological process that is highly relevant to environmentally significant industries such as the bioenergy and biorefining sectors. A major component of the wall is glucuronoxylan, a β1,4-linked xylose polysaccharide that is decorated with α-linked glucuronic and/or methylglucuronic acid (GlcA/MeGlcA). Recently three members of a glycoside hydrolase family, GH115, were shown to hydrolyze MeGlcA side chains from the internal regions of xylan, an activity that has not previously been described. Here we show that a dominant member of the human microbiota, Bacteroides ovatus, contains a GH115 enzyme, BoAgu115A, which displays glucuronoxylan α-(4-O-methyl)-glucuronidase activity. The enzyme is significantly more active against substrates in which the xylose decorated with GlcA/MeGlcA is flanked by one or more xylose residues. The crystal structure of BoAgu115A revealed a four-domain protein in which the active site, comprising a pocket that abuts a cleft-like structure, is housed in the second domain that adopts a TIM barrel-fold. The third domain, a five-helical bundle, and the C-terminal β-sandwich domain make inter-chain contacts leading to protein dimerization. Informed by the structure of the enzyme in complex with GlcA in its open ring form, in conjunction with mutagenesis studies, the potential substrate binding and catalytically significant amino acids were identified. Based on the catalytic importance of residues located on a highly flexible loop, the enzyme is required to undergo a substantial conformational change to form a productive Michaelis complex with glucuronoxylan.
- Research Article
57
- 10.1007/s11064-013-1173-2
- Oct 12, 2013
- Neurochemical Research
Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) is a homohexameric enzyme that catalyzes the reversible oxidative deamination of L-glutamate to 2-oxoglutarate. Only in the animal kingdom is this enzyme heavily allosterically regulated by a wide array of metabolites. The major activators are ADP and leucine and inhibitors include GTP, palmitoyl CoA, and ATP. Spontaneous mutations in the GTP inhibitory site that lead to the hyperinsulinism/hyperammonemia (HHS) syndrome have shed light as to why mammalian GDH is so tightly regulated. Patients with HHS exhibit hypersecretion of insulin upon consumption of protein and concomitantly extremely high levels of ammonium in the serum. The atomic structures of four new inhibitors complexed with GDH complexes have identified three different allosteric binding sites. Using a transgenic mouse model expressing the human HHS form of GDH, at least three of these compounds blocked the dysregulated form of GDH in pancreatic tissue. EGCG from green tea prevented the hyper-response to amino acids in whole animals and improved basal serum glucose levels. The atomic structure of the ECG-GDH complex and mutagenesis studies is directing structure-based drug design using these polyphenols as a base scaffold. In addition, all of these allosteric inhibitors are elucidating the atomic mechanisms of allostery in this complex enzyme.
- Research Article
155
- 10.1078/1438-4221-00198
- Jan 1, 2002
- International Journal of Medical Microbiology
Molecular analysis of beta-lactamase structure and function
- Research Article
120
- 10.1016/j.abb.2011.10.015
- Nov 4, 2011
- Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
The structure and allosteric regulation of mammalian glutamate dehydrogenase
- Research Article
62
- 10.1016/0006-291x(63)90547-3
- Mar 1, 1963
- Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
Different structural forms of reversibly dissociated glutamic dehydrogenase: Relation between enzymatic activity and molecular weight
- Research Article
22
- 10.1042/bj2050477
- Sep 1, 1982
- Biochemical Journal
Radiation inactivation of complex enzymic systems is currently used to determine the enzyme size and the molecular organization of the components in the system. We have simulated an equilibrium model describing the regulation of enzyme activity by association of the enzyme with a regulatory unit. It is assumed that, after irradiation, the system equilibrates before the enzyme activity is assayed. Our theoretical results show that the target-size analysis of these numerical data leads to a bad estimate of the enzyme size. Moreover, some implicit assumptions such as the transfer of radiation energy between non-covalently bound molecules should be verified before interpretation of target-size analysis. It is demonstrated that the apparent target size depends on the parameters of the system, namely the size and the concentration of the components, the equilibrium constant, the relative activities of free enzyme and enzymic complex, the existence of energy transfer, and the distribution of the components between free and bound forms during the irradiation.
- Research Article
105
- 10.1074/jbc.m513425200
- Mar 1, 2006
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
Histone methylation plays an important role in chromatin dynamics and gene expression. Methylation of histone H3-lysine 27 by the EZH2 complex has been linked to the silencing of homeotic genes and the inactivation of the X chromosome. Here we report a characterization of the substrate preferences of the enzyme complex using a reconstituted chromatin and enzyme system. We found that the linker histone H1, when incorporated into nucleosomes, stimulates the enzymatic activity toward histone H3. This stimulatory activity may be explained by protein-protein interactions between H1 and components of the EZH2 complex. In addition, we found that the EZH2 complex exhibits a dramatic preference for dinucleosomes when compared with mononucleosomes and that the stimulation of H3 methylation by H1 requires dinucleosomes or oligonucleosome substrates. Furthermore, in contrast with a recent study suggesting that Embryonic Ectoderm Development EED isoforms may affect substrate specificity, we found that EZH2 complexes reconstituted with different EED isoforms exhibit similar substrate preference and specificity. Our work supports the hypothesis that linker histone H1 and chromatin structure are important factors in determining the substrate preference of the EZH2 histone methyltransferase complex.
- Research Article
5
- 10.1039/d2cb00005a
- Jan 1, 2022
- RSC chemical biology
Nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs) are complex multi-modular enzymes containing catalytic domains responsible for the loading and incorporation of amino acids into natural products. These unique molecular factories can produce peptides with nonproteinogenic d-amino acids in which the epimerization (E) domain catalyzes the conversion of l-amino acids to d-amino acids, but its mechanism remains not fully understood. Here, we describe the development of pantetheine crosslinking probes that mimic the natural substrate l-Phe of the initiation module of tyrocidine synthetase, TycA, to elucidate and study the catalytic residues of the E domain. Mechanism-based crosslinking assays and MALDI-TOF MS were used to identify both H743 and E882 as the crosslinking site residues, demonstrating their roles as catalytic bases. Mutagenesis studies further validated these results and allowed the comparison of reactivity between the catalytic residues, concluding that glutamate acts as the dominant nucleophile in the crosslinking reaction, resembling the deprotonation of the Cα-H of amino acids in the epimerization reaction. The crosslinking probes employed in these studies provide new tools for studying the molecular details of E domains, as well as the potential to study C domains. In particular, they would elucidate key information for how these domains function and interact with their substrates in nature, further enhancing the knowledge needed to assist combinatorial biosynthetic efforts of NRPS systems to produce novel compounds.
- Book Chapter
7
- 10.1007/0-306-48204-5_25
- Jan 1, 1998
SummaryThe F0F1 type H+-translocating ATPase (‘ATP synthase’) is a central enzyme of bacterial, mitochondrial and chloroplast energy transducing membranes. The function of the chloroplast enzyme complex (CF0CF1) is the formation of ATP from ADP and phosphate at the expense of energy derived from a transmembrane electrochemical proton potential difference which is built up by photosynthetic electron transport (photophosphorylation). Recent results on the molecular genetics, structure and mechanism of the chloroplast enzyme, supplemented with data from its bacterial and mitochondrial counterparts, convey a more complete and precise image of this enzyme complex. The biosynthesis of CF0CF1 which requires the interplay between the nuclear and plastid genome, depends on a variety of regulatory factors. The nuclear genes are controlled by light and by plastid derived factors, the expression of the chloroplast-synthesized subunits is regulated at the transcriptional and the translational level. The crystal structure of the mitochondrial F1 supplied important structural information concerning the catalytic sites of the enzyme, and mutagenesis and crosslinking studies with the E. coli enzyme helped to localize important domains of interaction of the F1 part with F0. It is now well-established that catalysis and energy coupling involve movements of the ATPase structure, and regulation of CF0CF1 also involves conformational changes. The structural basis and the molecular mechanisms of those motions are subjects of intensive research. C. reinhardtii has become a model organism for the investigation of CF0CF1 mechanisms and biogenesis, due to its easy cultivation, the advances in molecular characterization of the ATP synthase genes, the possibilities for site-directed mutagenesis in the plastid as well as in the nuclear genome and improved methods for biochemical analysis. These studies will be especially helpful for the understanding of mechanistic and regulatory aspects that are specific for chloroplast ATP synthesis. This chapter reviews the state of knowledge about photosynthetic ATP synthases with special reference to work performed with C. reinhardtii.
- Research Article
150
- 10.1016/j.str.2010.03.011
- Jun 1, 2010
- Structure
Metal Ion Roles and the Movement of Hydrogen during Reaction Catalyzed by D-Xylose Isomerase: A Joint X-Ray and Neutron Diffraction Study
- Research Article
62
- 10.1074/jbc.m110.116046
- Jul 1, 2010
- Journal of Biological Chemistry
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) play a central role in host defense by inducing inflammatory and adaptive immune responses following infection. Drugs that target TLRs are of considerable interest as potential inflammatory regulators, vaccine adjuvants, and novel immunotherapeutics. TLR2, in cooperation with either TLR1 or TLR6, mediates responses to a wide variety of microbial products as well as products of host tissue damage. In an effort to understand the structural basis of TLR2 recognition and uncover novel TLR2 agonists, a synthetic chemical library of 24,000 compounds was screened using an IL-8-driven luciferase reporter in cells expressing these human receptors. The screening yielded several novel TLR2-dependent activators that utilize TLR1, TLR6, or both as co-receptors. These novel small molecule compounds are aromatic in nature and structurally unrelated to any known TLR2 agonists. The three most potent compounds do not exhibit synergistic activity, nor do they act as pseudoantagonists toward natural TLR2 activators. Interestingly, two of the compounds exhibit species specificity and are inactive toward murine peritoneal macrophages. Mutational analysis reveals that although the central extracellular region of TLR1 is required for stimulation, there are subtle differences in the mechanism of stimulation mediated by the synthetic compounds in comparison with natural lipoprotein agonists. The three most potent compounds activate cells in the nanomolar range and stimulate cytokine production from human peripheral blood monocytes. Our results confirm the utility of high throughput screens to uncover novel synthetic TLR2 agonists that may be of therapeutic benefit.
- Book Chapter
25
- 10.1016/s1569-2558(08)60246-5
- Jan 1, 1995
- Advances in Molecular and Cell Biology
Metabolic Channeling in Organized Enzyme Systems: Experiments and Models
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