Abstract
The siderophore biosynthetic enzyme A (SidA) ornithine hydroxylase from Aspergillus fumigatus is a fungal disease drug target involved in the production of hydroxamate-containing siderophores, which are used by the pathogen to sequester iron. SidA is an N-monooxygenase that catalyzes the NADPH-dependent hydroxylation of l-ornithine through a multistep oxidative mechanism, utilizing a C4a-hydroperoxyflavin intermediate. Here we present four new crystal structures of SidA in various redox and ligation states, including the first structure of oxidized SidA without NADP(H) or l-ornithine bound (resting state). The resting state structure reveals a new out active site conformation characterized by large rotations of the FAD isoalloxazine around the C1-'C2' and N10-C1' bonds, coupled to a 10-Å movement of the Tyr-loop. Additional structures show that either flavin reduction or the binding of NADP(H) is sufficient to drive the FAD to the in conformation. The structures also reveal protein conformational changes associated with the binding of NADP(H) and l-ornithine. Some of these residues were probed using site-directed mutagenesis. Docking was used to explore the active site of the out conformation. These calculations identified two potential ligand-binding sites. Altogether, our results provide new information about conformational dynamics in flavin-dependent monooxygenases. Understanding the different active site conformations that appear during the catalytic cycle may allow fine-tuning of inhibitor discovery efforts.
Highlights
The siderophore biosynthetic enzyme A (SidA) is essential for virulence in Aspergillus fumigatus [1, 2], a fungus that infects the lungs and can cause fatal mycoses in humans and other animals
SidA is essential for A. fumigatus virulence because it is required for siderophore-dependent iron acquisition [8]
The isoalloxazine conformation is much different from all previous SidA structures (Fig. 1B)
Summary
The siderophore biosynthetic enzyme A (SidA) is essential for virulence in Aspergillus fumigatus [1, 2], a fungus that infects the lungs and can cause fatal mycoses in humans and other animals. All previously determined SidA structures show the flavin in this in position, regardless of oxidation state or bound ligands (Table S1). The isoalloxazine has rotated to the in conformation and Tyr324 has shifted away from the active site (Fig. 2B).
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