Abstract

Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-dependent bacterial oleate hydratases (OhyAs) catalyze the addition of water to isolated fatty acid carbon–carbon double bonds. Staphylococcus aureus uses OhyA to counteract the host innate immune response by inactivating antimicrobial unsaturated fatty acids. Mechanistic information explaining how OhyAs catalyze regiospecific and stereospecific hydration is required to understand their biological functions and the potential for engineering new products. In this study, we deduced the catalytic mechanism of OhyA from multiple structures of S. aureus OhyA in binary and ternary complexes with combinations of ligands along with biochemical analyses of relevant mutants. The substrate-free state shows Arg81 is the gatekeeper that controls fatty acid entrance to the active site. FAD binding engages the catalytic loop to simultaneously rotate Glu82 into its active conformation and Arg81 out of the hydrophobic substrate tunnel, allowing the fatty acid to rotate into the active site. FAD binding also dehydrates the active site, leaving a single water molecule connected to Glu82. This active site water is a hydronium ion based on the analysis of its hydrogen bond network in the OhyA•PEG400•FAD complex. We conclude that OhyA accelerates acid-catalyzed alkene hydration by positioning the fatty acid double bond to attack the active site hydronium ion, followed by the addition of water to the transient carbocation intermediate. Structural transitions within S. aureus OhyA channel oleate to the active site, curl oleate around the substrate water, and stabilize the hydroxylated product to inactivate antimicrobial fatty acids.

Highlights

  • Production of hydroxy fatty acids for the food, chemical, and cosmetic industries [7]

  • FAD, flavin adenine dinucleotide; OhyA, oleate hydratase; PBD, Protein Data Bank; PEG400, polyethylene glycol 400. a Statistics for the highest-resolution shell are shown in parentheses. b Rfree test set uses 5% of the data

  • The first requirement for the OhyA reaction is the creation of a hydrogen ion electrophile (H3O+) that can be attacked by the alkene to form a carbocation intermediate

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Summary

Introduction

Production of hydroxy fatty acids for the food, chemical, and cosmetic industries [7]. Glu82 on the catalytic Loop coordinates the substrate water from below the PEG400 substrate analog in the absence of FAD and forms hydrogen bonds with three additional nearby water molecules in the active site (Fig. 4D).

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