Molecular Dynamics Explorations of Active Site Structure in Designed and Evolved Enzymes

被引:84
|
作者
Osuna, Silvia [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Jimenez-Oses, Gonzalo [3 ]
Noey, Elizabeth L. [3 ]
Houk, K. N. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Girona, Inst Quim Computac & Catalisi, Girona 17071, Spain
[2] Univ Girona, Dept Quim, Girona 17071, Spain
[3] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Chem & Biochem, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
ALCOHOL-DEHYDROGENASE; CARBENE TRANSFER; CATALYSIS; PREORGANIZATION; EVOLUTION; MOTION;
D O I
10.1021/ar500452q
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
This Account describes the use of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to reveal how mutations alter the structure and organization of enzyme active sites. As proposed by Pauling about 70 years ago and elaborated by many others since then, biocatalysis is efficient when functional groups in the active site of an enzyme are in optimal positions for transition state stabilization. Changes in mechanism and covalent interactions are often critical parts of enzyme catalysis. We describe our explorations of the dynamical preorganization of active sites using MD, studying the fluctuations between active and inactive conformations normally concealed to static crystallography. MD shows how the various arrangements of active site residues influence the free energy of the transition state and relates the populations of the catalytic conformational ensemble to the enzyme activity. This Account is organized around three case studies from our laboratory. We first describe the importance of dynamics in evaluating a series of computationally designed and experimentally evolved enzymes for the Kemp elimination, a popular subject in the enzyme design field. We find that the dynamics of the active site is influenced not only by the original sequence design and subsequent mutations but also by the nature of the ligand present in the active site. In the second example, we show how microsecond MD has been used to uncover the role of remote mutations in the active site dynamics and catalysis of a transesterase, LovD. This enzyme was evolved by Tang at UCLA and Codexis, Inc., and is a useful commercial catalyst for the production of the drug simvastatin. X-ray analysis of inactive and active mutants did not reveal differences in the active sites, but relatively long time scale MD in solution showed that the active site of the wild-type enzyme preorganizes only upon binding of the acyl carrier protein (ACP) that delivers the natural acyl group to the active site. In the absence of bound ACP, a noncatalytic arrangement of the catalytic triad is dominant. Unnatural truncated substrates are inactive because of the lack of protein-protein interactions provided by the ACP. Directed evolution is able to gradually restore the catalytic organization of the active site by motion of the protein backbone that alters the active site geometry. In the third case, we demonstrate the key role of MD in combination with crystallography to identify the origins of substrate-dependent stereoselectivities in a number of Codexis-engineered ketoreductases, one of which is used commercially for the production of the antibiotic sulopenem. Here, mutations alter the shape of the active site as well as the accessibility of water to different regions of it. Each of these examples reveals something different about how mutations can influence enzyme activity and shows that directed evolution, like natural evolution, can increase catalytic activity in a variety of remarkable and often subtle ways.
引用
收藏
页码:1080 / 1089
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Active Site Plasticity of a Computationally Designed RetroAldolase Enzyme
    Obexer, Richard
    Studer, Sabine
    Giger, Lars
    Pinkas, Daniel M.
    Gruetter, Markus G.
    Baker, David
    Hilvert, Donald
    CHEMCATCHEM, 2014, 6 (04) : 1043 - 1050
  • [2] The evolution of multiple active site configurations in a designed enzyme
    Hong, Nan-Sook
    Petrovic, Dusan
    Lee, Richmond
    Gryn'ova, Ganna
    Purg, Miha
    Saunders, Jake
    Bauer, Paul
    Carr, Paul D.
    Lin, Ching-Yeh
    Mabbitt, Peter D.
    Zhang, William
    Altamore, Timothy
    Easton, Chris
    Coote, Michelle L.
    Kamerlin, Shina C. L.
    Jackson, Colin J.
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2018, 9
  • [3] Evaluating the active site-substrate interplay between x-ray crystal structure and molecular dynamics in chorismate mutase
    Summers, Thomas J.
    Hemmati, Reza
    Miller, Justin E.
    Agbaglo, Donatus A.
    Cheng, Qianyi
    DeYonker, Nathan J.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2023, 158 (06)
  • [4] Evolution of a designed retro-aldolase leads to complete active site remodeling
    Giger, Lars
    Caner, Sami
    Obexer, Richard
    Kast, Peter
    Baker, David
    Ban, Nenad
    Hilvert, Donald
    NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, 2013, 9 (08) : 494 - U49
  • [5] ENZYME DYNAMICS Control of active-site compression
    Klinman, Judith P.
    NATURE CHEMISTRY, 2010, 2 (11) : 907 - 909
  • [6] Conformational Disorganization within the Active Site of a Recently Evolved Organophosphate Hydrolase Limits Its Catalytic Efficiency
    Mabbitt, Peter D.
    Correy, Galen J.
    Meirelles, Tamara
    Fraser, Nicholas J.
    Coote, Michelle L.
    Jackson, Colin J.
    BIOCHEMISTRY, 2016, 55 (09) : 1408 - 1417
  • [7] Diffusion and interactions of carbon dioxide and oxygen in the vicinity of the active site of Rubisco: Molecular dynamics and quantum chemical studies
    El-Hendawy, Morad M.
    Garate, Jose-Antonio
    English, Niall J.
    O'Reilly, Stephen
    Mooney, Damian A.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2012, 137 (14)
  • [8] Substrate-to-Product Conversion Facilitates Active Site Loop Opening in Yeast Enolase: A Molecular Dynamics Study
    Li, Pengfei
    Hammes-Schiffer, Sharon
    ACS CATALYSIS, 2019, 9 (10) : 8985 - 8990
  • [9] Active Brownian particles simulated in molecular dynamics*
    Wang, Liya
    Xu, Xinpeng
    Li, Zhigang
    Qian, Tiezheng
    CHINESE PHYSICS B, 2020, 29 (09)
  • [10] Unusual commonality in active site structural features of substrate promiscuous and specialist enzymes
    Thakur, Deeksha
    Pandit, Shashi Bhushan
    JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 2022, 214 (01)