Abstract

KshA is the oxygenase component of 3-ketosteroid 9α-hydroxylase, a Rieske oxygenase involved in the bacterial degradation of steroids. Consistent with its role in bile acid catabolism, KshA1 from Rhodococcus rhodochrous DSM43269 had the highest apparent specificity (kcat/Km) for steroids with an isopropyl side chain at C17, such as 3-oxo-23,24-bisnorcholesta-1,4-diene-22-oate (1,4-BNC). By contrast, the KshA5 homolog had the highest apparent specificity for substrates with no C17 side chain (kcat/Km >10(5) s(-1) M(-1) for 4-estrendione, 5α-androstandione, and testosterone). Unexpectedly, substrates such as 4-androstene-3,17-dione (ADD) and 4-BNC displayed strong substrate inhibition (Ki S ∼100 μM). By comparison, the cholesterol-degrading KshAMtb from Mycobacterium tuberculosis had the highest specificity for CoA-thioesterified substrates. These specificities are consistent with differences in the catabolism of cholesterol and bile acids, respectively, in actinobacteria. X-ray crystallographic structures of the KshAMtb·ADD, KshA1·1,4-BNC-CoA, KshA5·ADD, and KshA5·1,4-BNC-CoA complexes revealed that the enzymes have very similar steroid-binding pockets with the substrate's C17 oriented toward the active site opening. Comparisons suggest Tyr-245 and Phe-297 are determinants of KshA1 specificity. All enzymes have a flexible 16-residue "mouth loop," which in some structures completely occluded the substrate-binding pocket from the bulk solvent. Remarkably, the catalytic iron and α-helices harboring its ligands were displaced up to 4.4 Å in the KshA5·substrate complexes as compared with substrate-free KshA, suggesting that Rieske oxygenases may have a dynamic nature similar to cytochrome P450.

Highlights

  • KshA is a bacterial steroid-transforming oxygenase of biocatalytic interest and a virulence determinant in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

  • The steady-state kinetic studies corroborate and extend previous studies of KshA1 that has been implicated in bile acid catabolism based on substrate preference [24], gene deletion studies, and phylogenetic analysis [39]

  • These studies further establish KshA5’s broad substrate specificity for short side chain steroids and, unexpectedly, its strong substrate inhibition. This specificity is borne out by the structural studies showing that the three enzymes bind the steroid very but that KshAMtb has a larger pocket that can accommodate a substrate with a longer side chain

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Summary

Introduction

KshA is a bacterial steroid-transforming oxygenase of biocatalytic interest and a virulence determinant in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Consistent with its role in bile acid catabolism, KshA1 from Rhodococcus rhodochrous DSM43269 had the highest apparent specificity (kcat/Km) for steroids with an isopropyl side chain at C17, such as 3-oxo-23,24-bisnorcholesta-1,4diene-22-oate (1,4-BNC). The KshA5 homolog had the highest apparent specificity for substrates with no C17 side chain (kcat/Km >105 s؊1 M؊1 for 4-estrendione, 5␣-androstandione, and testosterone). Substrates such as 4-androstene-3,17-dione (ADD) and 4-BNC displayed strong substrate inhibition (KiS ϳ100 ␮M). The cholesterol-degrading KshAMtb from Mycobacterium tuberculosis had the highest specificity for CoA-thioesterified substrates These specificities are consistent with differences in the catabolism of cholesterol and bile acids, respectively, in actinobacteria. The catalytic iron and ␣-helices harboring its ligands were displaced up to 4.4 Ain the KshA51⁄7substrate complexes as compared with substrate-free KshA, suggesting that Rieske oxygenases may have a dynamic nature similar to cytochrome P450

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