Abstract

The first step in the biosynthesis of the medicinally important carbapenem family of beta-lactam antibiotics is catalyzed by carboxymethylproline synthase (CarB), a unique member of the crotonase superfamily. CarB catalyzes formation of (2S,5S)-carboxymethylproline [(2S,5S)-t-CMP] from malonyl-CoA and l-glutamate semialdehyde. In addition to using a cosubstrate, CarB catalyzes C-C and C-N bond formation processes as well as an acyl-coenzyme A hydrolysis reaction. We describe the crystal structure of CarB in the presence and absence of acetyl-CoA at 2.24 A and 3.15 A resolution, respectively. The structures reveal that CarB contains a conserved oxy-anion hole probably required for decarboxylation of malonyl-CoA and stabilization of the resultant enolate. Comparison of the structures reveals that conformational changes (involving His(229)) in the cavity predicted to bind l-glutamate semialdehyde occur on (co)substrate binding. Mechanisms for the formation of the carboxymethylproline ring are discussed in the light of the structures and the accompanying studies using isotopically labeled substrates; cyclization via 1,4-addition is consistent with the observed labeling results (providing that hydrogen exchange at the C-6 position of carboxymethylproline does not occur). The side chain of Glu(131) appears to be positioned to be involved in hydrolysis of the carboxymethylproline-CoA ester intermediate. Labeling experiments ruled out the possibility that hydrolysis proceeds via an anhydride in which water attacks a carbonyl derived from Glu(131), as proposed for 3-hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA hydrolase. The structural work will aid in mutagenesis studies directed at altering the selectivity of CarB to provide intermediates for the production of clinically useful carbapenems.

Highlights

  • The exception of the carbapenems and monobactams all the commercially used ␤-lactams are produced either by fermentation or by chemical modification of fermented materials

  • Co-crystallization and soaking experiments with Acetyl coenzyme A (AcCoA) acting as a malonyl-CoA analogue under the conditions used to obtain uncomplexed carboxymethylproline synthase (CarB) crystals were unsuccessful

  • The structure of the CarB1⁄7AcCoA complex was solved in spacegroup P63 by molecular replacement using the model of uncomplexed CarB as a search model (PHASER LLG of 3771.9)

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Summary

Introduction

The exception of the carbapenems and monobactams all the commercially used ␤-lactams are produced either by fermentation or by chemical modification of fermented materials. Formation of carboxymethylproline (t-CMP) the ␤-amino acid precursor of the first formed ␤-lactam ((3S,5S)-carbapenam-3-carboxylate) is catalyzed by a member of the crotonase superfamily, carboxymethylproline synthase (CarB), in a reaction involving malonyl-CoA and L-glutamate semialdehyde (L-GSA) substrates [14, 15] (Scheme 1). CarB is an unusual crotonase superfamily member (sequence alignment shown in supplementary Fig. S1), because it catalyzes C–C and C–N bond formations in addition to decarboxylation and thioester hydrolysis. Whereas some of these individual reactions are catalyzed by

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