Abstract

Strategies for O2 activation by copper enzymes were recently expanded to include mononuclear Cu sites, with the discovery of the copper-dependent polysaccharide monooxygenases, also classified as auxiliary-activity enzymes 9-11 (AA9-11). These enzymes are finding considerable use in industrial biofuel production. Crystal structures of polysaccharide monooxygenases have emerged, but experimental studies are yet to determine the solution structure of the Cu site and how this relates to reactivity. From X-ray absorption near edge structure and extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopies, we observed a change from four-coordinate Cu(II) to three-coordinate Cu(I) of the active site in solution, where three protein-derived nitrogen ligands coordinate the Cu in both redox states, and a labile hydroxide ligand is lost upon reduction. The spectroscopic data allowed for density functional theory calculations of an enzyme active site model, where the optimized Cu(I) and (II) structures were consistent with the experimental data. The O2 reactivity of the Cu(I) site was probed by EPR and stopped-flow absorption spectroscopies, and a rapid one-electron reduction of O2 and regeneration of the resting Cu(II) enzyme were observed. This reactivity was evaluated computationally, and by calibration to Cu-superoxide model complexes, formation of an end-on Cu-AA9-superoxide species was found to be thermodynamically favored. We discuss how this thermodynamically difficult one-electron reduction of O2 is enabled by the unique protein structure where two nitrogen ligands from His1 dictate formation of a T-shaped Cu(I) site, which provides an open coordination position for strong O2 binding with very little reorganization energy.

Highlights

  • Strategies for O2 activation by copper enzymes were recently expanded to include mononuclear Cu sites, with the discovery of the copper-dependent polysaccharide monooxygenases, classified as auxiliary-activity enzymes 9–11 (AA9-11)

  • Copper-dependent enzymes usually use more than one metal to activate O2 by multielectron reduction, but recently it was discovered that cellulose and chitin degrading polysaccharide monooxygenase enzymes use only a single Cu center for catalysis, in a reaction that is of great interest to the biofuel industries

  • We investigated the first step in this proposed reaction sequence by monitoring the reactivity of ascorbate-reduced Cu-AA9 with dioxygen by EPR and stopped-flow absorption spectroscopies

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Summary

Introduction

Strategies for O2 activation by copper enzymes were recently expanded to include mononuclear Cu sites, with the discovery of the copper-dependent polysaccharide monooxygenases, classified as auxiliary-activity enzymes 9–11 (AA9-11). Copper-dependent enzymes usually use more than one metal to activate O2 by multielectron reduction, but recently it was discovered that cellulose and chitin degrading polysaccharide monooxygenase enzymes use only a single Cu center for catalysis, in a reaction that is of great interest to the biofuel industries. To understand this reactivity, we have determined the solution structures of both the reduced and oxidized Cu site, and determined experimentally and computationally how this site is capable of facile O2 activation by a thermodynamically difficult one-electron reduction, via an inner-sphere Cusuperoxide intermediate

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