Luet-Lok Wong

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Organization: University of Oxford , England
Department: Department of Chemistry
Title: Professor(PhD)

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Co-reporter:Xinkun Ren, Jack A. O’Hanlon, Melloney Morris, Jeremy Robertson, and Luet Lok Wong
ACS Catalysis 2016 Volume 6(Issue 10) pp:6833
Publication Date(Web):September 1, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acscatal.6b02189
Expanding Nature’s catalytic repertoire to include reactions important in synthetic chemistry opens new opportunities for biocatalysis. An intramolecular C–H amination route to imidazolidin-4-ones via α-functionalization of 2-aminoacetamides catalyzed by evolved variants of cytochrome P450BM3 (CYP102A1) from Bacillus megaterium has been developed. Screening of a library of ca. 100 variants based on four template mutants with enhanced activity for the oxidation of unnatural substrates and preparative scale reactions in vitro and in vivo show that the enzymes give up to 98% isolated yield of cyclization products for diverse substrates. 2-Aminoacetamides with one- and two-ring cyclic amines bearing substituents and aliphatic, alicyclic, and substituted aromatic amides are cyclized. Regiodivergent C–H amination was achieved at benzylic and nonbenzylic positions in a tetrahydroisoquinolinyl substrate by the use of different mutants. This C–H amination reaction offers a scalable route to imidazolidin-4-ones with varied functionalized substituents that may have desirable biological activity.Keywords: C−H activation; C−H amination; heme monooxygenases; P450; protein engineering
Co-reporter:Stephen G. Bell;Wen Yang;Alison Dale
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 2013 Volume 97( Issue 9) pp:3979-3990
Publication Date(Web):2013 May
DOI:10.1007/s00253-012-4278-7
CYP101D2 is a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase from Novosphingobium aromaticivorans which is closely related to CYP101A1 (P450cam) from Pseudomonas putida. Both enzymes selectively hydroxylate camphor to 5-exo-hydroxycamphor, and the residues that line the active sites of both enzymes are similar including the pre-eminent Tyr96 residue. However, Met98 and Leu253 in CYP101D2 replace Phe98 and Val247 in CYP101A1, and camphor binding only results in a maximal change in the spin state to 40 % high-spin. Substitutions at Tyr96, Met98 and Leu253 in CYP101D2 reduced both the spin state shift on camphor binding and the camphor oxidation activity. The Tyr96Ala mutant increased the affinity of CYP101D2 for hydrocarbon substrates including adamantane, cyclooctane, hexane and 2-methylpentane. The monooxygenase activity of the Tyr96Ala variant towards alkane substrates was also enhanced compared with the wild-type enzyme. The crystal structure of the substrate-free form of this variant shows the enzyme in an open conformation (PDB: 4DXY), similar to that observed with the wild-type enzyme (PDB: 3NV5), with the side chain of Ala96 pointing away from the heme. Despite this, the binding and activity data suggest that this residue plays an important role in substrate binding, evidencing that the enzyme probably undergoes catalysis in a more closed conformation, similar to those observed in the crystal structures of CYP101A1 (PDB: 2CPP) and CYP101D1 (PDB: 3LXI).
Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse, Stephen G. Bell and Luet-Lok Wong  
Chemical Society Reviews 2012 vol. 41(Issue 3) pp:1218-1260
Publication Date(Web):18 Oct 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CS15192D
P450BM3 (CYP102A1), a fatty acid hydroxylase from Bacillus megaterium, has been extensively studied over a period of almost forty years. The enzyme has been redesigned to catalyse the oxidation of non-natural substrates as diverse as pharmaceuticals, terpenes and gaseous alkanes using a variety of engineering strategies. Crystal structures have provided a basis for several of the catalytic effects brought about by mutagenesis, while changes to reduction potentials, inter-domain electron transfer rates and catalytic parameters have yielded functional insights. Areas of active research interest include drug metabolite production, the development of process-scale techniques, unravelling general mechanistic aspects of P450 chemistry, methane oxidation, and improving selectivity control to allow the synthesis of fine chemicals. This review draws together the disparate research themes and places them in a historical context with the aim of creating a resource that can be used as a gateway to the field.
Co-reporter:Stephen G. Bell, James H. C. McMillan, Jake A. Yorke, Emma Kavanagh, Eachan O. D. Johnson and Luet-Lok Wong  
Chemical Communications 2012 vol. 48(Issue 95) pp:11692-11694
Publication Date(Web):15 Oct 2012
DOI:10.1039/C2CC35968E
A ferredoxin associated with biological Fe–S cluster assembly has been remodelled to transfer electrons to a P450 enzyme and support substrate oxidation at 80% of the physiological ferredoxin activity, opening up the possibility of tailoring ferredoxins to reconstitute the activity of P450 enzymes for which the electron transfer partner proteins are not known.
Co-reporter:Stephen G. Bell, Wen Yang, Adrian B. H. Tan, Ruimin Zhou, Eachan O. D. Johnson, Aili Zhang, Weihong Zhou, Zihe Rao and Luet-Lok Wong  
Dalton Transactions 2012 vol. 41(Issue 28) pp:8703-8714
Publication Date(Web):18 May 2012
DOI:10.1039/C2DT30783A
The crystal structures of the 4-methoxybenzoate bound forms of cytochrome P450 enzymes CYP199A2 and CYP199A4 from the Rhodopseudomonas palustris strains CGA009 and HaA2 have been solved. The structures of these two enzymes, which share 86% sequence identity, are very similar though some differences are found on the proximal surface. In these structures the enzymes have a closed conformation, in contrast to the substrate-free form of CYP199A2 where an obvious substrate access channel is observed. The switch from an open to a closed conformation arises from pronounced residue side-chain movements and alterations of ion pair and hydrogen bonding interactions at the entrance of the access channel. A chloride ion bound just inside the protein surface caps the entrance to the active site and protects the substrate and the heme from the external solvent. In both structures the substrate is held in place via hydrophobic and hydrogen bond interactions. The methoxy group is located over the heme iron, accounting for the high activity and selectivity of these enzymes for oxidative demethylation of the substrate. Mutagenesis studies on CYP199A4 highlight the involvement of hydrophobic (Phe185) and hydrophilic (Arg92, Ser95 and Arg243) amino acid residues in the binding of para-substituted benzoates by these enzymes.
Co-reporter:Dr. Stephen G. Bell;Ruimin Zhou;Dr. Wen Yang;Adrian B. H. Tan;Alexer S. Gentleman;Dr. Luet-Lok Wong;Dr. Weihong Zhou
Chemistry - A European Journal 2012 Volume 18( Issue 52) pp:16677-16688
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201202776

Abstract

The cytochrome P450 enzyme CYP199A4, from Rhodopseudomonas palustris HaA2, can efficiently demethylate 4-methoxybenzoic acid. It is also capable of oxidising a range of other related substrates. By investigating substrates with different substituents and ring systems we have been able to show that the carboxylate group and the nature of the ring system and the substituent are all important for optimal substrate binding and activity. The structures of the veratric acid, 2-naphthoic acid and indole-6-carboxylic acid substrate-bound CYP199A4 complexes reveal the substrate binding modes and the side-chain conformational changes of the active site residues to accommodate these larger substrates. They also provide a rationale for the selectivity of product oxidation. The oxidation of alkyl substituted benzoic acids by CYP199A4 is more complex, with desaturation reactions competing with hydroxylation activity. The structure of 4-ethylbenzoic acid-bound CYP199A4 revealed that the substrate is held in a similar position to 4-methoxybenzoic acid, and that the Cβ CH bonds of the ethyl group are closer to the heme iron than those of the Cα (3.5 vs. 4.8 Å). This observation, when coupled to the relative energies of the reaction intermediates, indicates that the positioning of the alkyl group relative to the heme iron may be critical in determining the amount of desaturation that is observed. By mutating a single residue in the active site of CYP199A4 (Phe185) we were able to convert the enzyme into a 4-ethylbenzoic acid desaturase.

Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse, Wen Yang, Jake A. Yorke, Henry G. Tufton, Lydia C. I. Ogilvie, Stephen G. Bell, Weihong Zhou, Mark Bartlam, Zihe Rao and Luet-Lok Wong  
Dalton Transactions 2011 vol. 40(Issue 40) pp:10383-10396
Publication Date(Web):20 May 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1DT10098J
The substrate-free crystal structure of a five-mutation directed evolution variant of CYP102A1 (P450BM3) with generic activity-enhancing properties (“KT2”) has been determined to 1.9-Å resolution. There is a close resemblance to substrate-bound structures of the wild-type enzyme (WT). The disruption of two salt bridges that link the G- and I-helices in WT causes conformational changes that break several hydrogen bonds and reduce the angle of the kink in the I-helix where dioxygen activation is thought to take place. The side-chain of a key active site residue, Phe87, is rotated in one molecule of the asymmetric unit, and the side-chains of Phe158 and Phe261 cascade into the orientations found in fatty-acid-bound forms of the enzyme. The iron is out of the porphyrin plane, towards the proximal cysteine. Unusually, the axial water ligand to the haem iron is not hydrogen-bonded to Ala264. The first electron transfer from the reductase domain to the haem domain of substrate-free KT2 is almost as fast as in palmitate-bound WT even though the reduction potential of the haem domain is only slightly more oxidising than that of substrate-free WT. However, NADPH is turned over slowly in the absence of substrate, so the catalytic cycle is gated by a step subsequent to the first electron transfer—a contrast to WT. Propylbenzene binding slightly raises the first electron transfer rate in WT but not in KT2. It is proposed that the generic rate accelerating properties of KT2 arise from the substrate-free form being in a catalytically ready conformation, such that substrate-induced changes to the structure play a less significant role in promoting the first electron transfer than in WT.
Co-reporter:Benjamin Rowlatt;Jake A. Yorke;Anthony J. Strong
Protein & Cell 2011 Volume 2( Issue 8) pp:656-671
Publication Date(Web):2011 August
DOI:10.1007/s13238-011-1082-6
Fatty acid binding and oxidation kinetics for wild type P450BM3 (CYP102A1) from Bacillus megaterium have been found to display chain length-dependent homotropic behavior. Laurate and 13-methyl-myristate display Michaelis-Menten behavior while there are slight deviations with myristate at low ionic strengths. Palmitate shows Michaelis-Menten kinetics and hyperbolic binding behavior in 100 mmol/L phosphate, pH 7.4, but sigmoidal kinetics (with an apparent intercept) in low ionic strength buffers and at physiological phosphate concentrations. In low ionic strength buffers both the heme domain and the full-length enzyme show complex palmitate binding behavior that indicates a minimum of four fatty acid binding sites, with high cooperativity for the binding of the fourth palmitate molecule, and the full-length enzyme showing tighter palmitate binding than the heme domain. The first flavin-to-heme electron transfer is faster for laurate, myristate and palmitate in 100 mmol/L phosphate than in 50mmol/L Tris (pH 7.4), yet each substrate induces similar high-spin heme content. For palmitate in low phosphate buffer concentrations, the rate constant of the first electron transfer is much larger than kcat. The results suggest that phosphate has a specific effect in promoting the first electron transfer step, and that P450BM3 could modulate Bacillus membrane morphology and fluidity via palmitate oxidation in response to the external phosphate concentration.
Co-reporter:Luet-Lok Wong
ChemBioChem 2011 Volume 12( Issue 17) pp:2537-2539
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201100606
Co-reporter:Dr. Christopher J. C. Whitehouse;Dr. Nicholas H. Rees;Dr. Stephen G. Bell ;Dr. Luet-Lok Wong
Chemistry - A European Journal 2011 Volume 17( Issue 24) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201002465

Abstract

The oxidation of o-xylene by P450BM3 from Bacillus megaterium yields, in addition to the products formed by microsomal P450s, two metabolites containing an NIH-shifted methyl group, one of which lacks the aromatic character of the substrate. The failure of the epoxide precursor of these two products to rearrange to the more stable 2,7-dimethyloxepin suggests that ring opening is P450-mediated. With m-xylene, the principal metabolite is 2,4-dimethylphenol. The partition between aromatic and benzylic hydroxylation is primarily governed by the steric prescriptions of the active site rather than by CH bond reactivity. It is also substrate-dependent, o- and m-xylene appearing to bind to the enzyme in different orientations. The product distributions given by variants containing the F87A mutation, which creates additional space in the active site, resemble those reported for microsomal systems.

Co-reporter:Dr. Christopher J. C. Whitehouse ;Wen Yang ;Jake A. Yorke;Benjamin C. Rowlatt;Anthony J. F. Strong;Dr. Christopher F. Blanford;Dr. Stephen G. Bell;Dr. Mark Bartlam;Dr. Luet-Lok Wong; Zihe Rao 
ChemBioChem 2010 Volume 11( Issue 18) pp:2549-2556
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201000421

Abstract

The crystal structures of the haem domains of Ala330Pro and Ile401Pro, two single-site proline variants of CYP102A1 (P450BM3) from Bacillus megaterium, have been solved. In the A330P structure, the active site is constricted by the relocation of the Pro329 side chain into the substrate access channel, providing a basis for the distinctive CH bond oxidation profiles given by the variant and the enhanced activity with small molecules. I401P, which is exceptionally active towards non-natural substrates, displays a number of structural similarities to substrate-bound forms of the wild-type enzyme, notably an off-axial water ligand, a drop in the proximal loop, and the positioning of two I-helix residues, Gly265 and His266, the reorientation of which prevents the formation of several intrahelical hydrogen bonds. Second-generation I401P variants gave high in vitro oxidation rates with non-natural substrates as varied as fluorene and propane, towards which the wild-type enzyme is essentially inactive. The substrate-free I401P haem domain had a reduction potential slightly more oxidising than the palmitate-bound wild-type haem domain, and a first electron transfer rate that was about 10 % faster. The electronic properties of A330P were, by contrast, similar to those of the substrate-free wild-type enzyme.

Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse;Stephen G. Bell Dr.;Wen Yang;Jake A. Yorke;Christopher F. Blanford Dr.;Anthony J. F. Strong;Edward J. Morse;Mark Bartlam ;Zihe Rao Dr.
ChemBioChem 2009 Volume 10( Issue 10) pp:1654-1656
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/cbic.200900279
Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse, Stephen G. Bell, Henry G. Tufton, Richard J. P. Kenny, Lydia C. I. Ogilvie and Luet-Lok Wong  
Chemical Communications 2008 (Issue 8) pp:966-968
Publication Date(Web):11 Jan 2008
DOI:10.1039/B718124H
The evolution of CYP102A1 variants with enhanced activity and altered specificity characteristics.
Co-reporter:ChristopherJ.C. Whitehouse;StephenG. Bell Dr. Dr.
Chemistry - A European Journal 2008 Volume 14( Issue 35) pp:10905-10908
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.200801927
Co-reporter:Rebecca J. Sowden, Samina Yasmin, Nicholas H. Rees, Stephen G. Bell and Luet-Lok Wong  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2005 vol. 3(Issue 1) pp:57-64
Publication Date(Web):18 Nov 2004
DOI:10.1039/B413068E
The sesquiterpenoids are a large class of naturally occurring compounds with biological functions and desirable properties. Oxidation of the sesquiterpene (+)-valencene by wild type and mutants of P450cam from Pseudomonas putida, and of P450BM-3 from Bacillus megaterium, have been investigated as a potential route to (+)-nootkatone, a fine fragrance. Wild type P450cam did not oxidise (+)-valencene but the mutants showed activities up to 9.8 nmol (nmol P450)−1 min−1, with (+)-trans-nootkatol and (+)-nootkatone constituting >85% of the products. Wild type P450BM-3 and mutants had higher activities (up to 43 min−1) than P450cam but were much less selective. Of the many products, cis- and trans-(+)-nootkatol, (+)-nootkatone, cis-(+)-valencene-1,10-epoxide, trans-(+)-nootkaton-9-ol, and (+)-nootkatone-13S,14-epoxide were isolated from whole-cell reactions and characterised. The selectivity patterns suggest that (+)-valencene has one binding orientation in P450cam but multiple orientations in P450BM-3.
Co-reporter:Feng Xu;Stephen G. Bell Dr.;Jaka Lednik;Andrew Insley;Zihe Rao Dr.
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2005 Volume 44(Issue 26) pp:
Publication Date(Web):24 MAY 2005
DOI:10.1002/anie.200462630

A NADH turnover rate of 741 min−1 in the oxidition of ethane to ethanol is observed with an engineered form of the heme monooxygenase cytochrome P450cam—the first example of such activity for a P450 enzyme (GC analysis shown). Ethanol is formed at 78 min−1 (10.5 % coupling). The mutant is ≈45 % high-spin in the absence of substrate, making it a useful platform for P450 structure–function studies.

Co-reporter:Feng Xu;Stephen G. Bell Dr.;Jaka Lednik;Andrew Insley;Zihe Rao Dr.
Angewandte Chemie 2005 Volume 117(Issue 26) pp:
Publication Date(Web):24 MAY 2005
DOI:10.1002/ange.200462630

Ein NADH-Umsatz von 741 min−1 wird bei der Oxidation von Ethan zu Ethanol mit einer „konstruierten“ Form der Häm-Monooxygenase Cytochrom P450cam erreicht. Das ist das erste Beispiel für eine solche Aktivität eines P450-Enzyms (die GC-Analyse ist gezeigt). Ethanol entsteht mit 78 min−1 (10.5 % Kupplung). Die Mutante ist ohne Substrat zu etwa 45 % im High-Spin-Zustand, was sie zu einer nützlichen Plattform für Struktur-Funktions-Studien an P450 macht.

Co-reporter:Jonathan P. Jones, Ellen J. O’Hare and Luet-Lok Wong  
Chemical Communications 2000 (Issue 3) pp:247-248
Publication Date(Web):31 Jan 2000
DOI:10.1039/A909536E
Polychlorinated aromatic compounds are persistent environmental contaminants; we describe here the redesign and engineering of the haem monooxygenase cytochrome P450cam to oxidise these compounds efficiently to the chlorinated phenols which are readily degraded by many micro-organisms, thus providing a basis for novel systems for biological clean-up of these inert compounds.
Co-reporter:Jonathan P. Jones;Julie-Anne Stevenson;Julie-Anne Stevenson;Jonathan P. Jones
Israel Journal of Chemistry 2000 Volume 40(Issue 1) pp:55-62
Publication Date(Web):8 MAR 2010
DOI:10.1560/NPYW-GU7V-NRQU-R7T6

The Phe-193 residue on the surface of cytochrome P450cam is part of a cluster of residues proposed to undergo dynamic fluctuations to permit the entry of substrates into the active site pocket. The role of this residue in the activity of P450cam has been investigated. The F193A, F193V, F193I, and F193L mutations were introduced into the Y96F mutant, which had been shown to oxidize a wider range of molecules at faster rates than the wild-type enzyme. The F193L mutation had very little effect, while the F193A and F193I mutations reduced the camphor oxidation rate and almost abolished the styrene and naphthalene oxidation activity of the Y96F mutant. In contrast, the high activity of the Y96F mutant for the oxidation of adamantane, hexane, and 3-methylpentane was largely retained, although the product distributions were significantly altered. This dramatic difference between the F193L and F193I mutations warrants further investigation. The turnover rates of the Y96F–F193I with all the substrates showed the same dependence on the Pd:P450cam concentration ratio as for the Y96F mutant, clearly indicating that if the F193 mutations had affected substrate access, substrate entry was still fast compared to the first electron transfer, which remained the rate-limiting step for the overall reaction. We concluded that the F193A and F193I mutations shifted the substrate specificity of P450cam by causing structural changes that were relayed from their surface position down to the vicinity of the heme. The altered substrate binding resulted in differential electron transfer kinetics between classes of compounds.

Co-reporter:Stephen G. Bell, Feng Xu, Ian Forward, Mark Bartlam, ... Luet-Lok Wong
Journal of Molecular Biology (14 November 2008) Volume 383(Issue 3) pp:561-574
Publication Date(Web):14 November 2008
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2008.08.033
CYP199A2, a cytochrome P450 enzyme from Rhodopseudomonas palustris, oxidatively demethylates 4-methoxybenzoic acid to 4-hydroxybenzoic acid. 4-Ethylbenzoic acid is converted to a mixture of predominantly 4-(1-hydroxyethyl)-benzoic acid and 4-vinylbenzoic acid, the latter being a rare example of CC bond dehydrogenation of an unbranched alkyl group. The crystal structure of CYP199A2 has been determined at 2.0-Å resolution. The enzyme has the common P450 fold, but the B′ helix is missing and the G helix is broken into two (G and G′) by a kink at Pro204. Helices G and G′ are bent back from the extended BC loop and the I helix to open up a clearly defined substrate access channel. Channel openings in this region of the P450 fold are rare in bacterial P450 enzymes but more common in eukaryotic P450 enzymes. The channel is hydrophobic except for the basic residue Arg246 at the entrance, which probably plays a role in the specificity of this enzyme for charged benzoates over neutral phenols and benzenes. The substrate binding pocket is hydrophobic, with Ser97 and Ser247 being the only polar residues. Computer docking of 4-ethylbenzoic acid into the active site suggests that the substrate carboxylate oxygens interact with Ser97 and Ser247, and the β-methyl group is located over the heme iron by Phe185, the side chain of which is only 6.35 Å above the iron in the native structure. This binding orientation is consistent with the observed product profile of exclusive attack at the para substituent. Putidaredoxin of the CYP101A1 system from Pseudomonas putida supports substrate oxidation by CYP199A2 at ∼6% of the activity of the physiological ferredoxin. Comparison of the heme proximal faces of CYP199A2 and CYP101A1 suggests that charge reversal surrounding the surface residue Leu369 in CYP199A2 may be a significant factor in this low cross-activity.
Co-reporter:Eachan O. D. Johnson and Luet-Lok Wong
Catalysis Science & Technology (2011-Present) 2016 - vol. 6(Issue 20) pp:NaN7560-7560
Publication Date(Web):2016/09/01
DOI:10.1039/C6CY01042C
Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes catalyze the insertion of oxygen into carbon–hydrogen bonds and have great potential for enzymatic synthesis. Application development of class I CYPs is hampered by their dependence on two redox partners (a ferredoxin and ferredoxin reductase), slowing catalysis compared to self-sufficient CYPs such as CYP102A1 (P450BM3). Previous attempts to address this have fused all three components in several permutations and geometries, with much reduced activity compared to the native system. We report here the new approach of fusing putidaredoxin reductase (PdR) to the carboxy-terminus of CYP101A1 (P450cam) via a linker peptide and reconstituting camphor hydroxylase activity with free putidaredoxin (Pdx). Initial purification of a P450cam–PdR fusion yielded 2.0% heme incorporation. Co-expression of E. coli ferrochelatase, lengthening the linker from 5 to 20 residues, and altering culture conditions for enzyme production furnished 85% heme content. Fusion co-expression with Pdx gave a functional system with comparable in vivo camphor oxidation activity as the native system. In vitro, the fused system's steady state NADH oxidation rate was two-fold faster than that of the native system. In contrast to the native system, NADH oxidation rates for the fusion enzyme showed non-hyperbolic dependence on Pdx concentration, suggesting a role for the PdR domain; these data were consistent with a kinetic model based on two-site binding of Pdx by P450cam–PdR and inactive dimer formation of the fusion. P450cam–PdR is the first example of a class I P450 fusion that exhibits significantly more favorable behavior than that of the native system.
Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse, Stephen G. Bell, Henry G. Tufton, Richard J. P. Kenny, Lydia C. I. Ogilvie and Luet-Lok Wong
Chemical Communications 2008(Issue 8) pp:NaN968-968
Publication Date(Web):2008/01/11
DOI:10.1039/B718124H
The evolution of CYP102A1 variants with enhanced activity and altered specificity characteristics.
Co-reporter:Stephen G. Bell, James H. C. McMillan, Jake A. Yorke, Emma Kavanagh, Eachan O. D. Johnson and Luet-Lok Wong
Chemical Communications 2012 - vol. 48(Issue 95) pp:NaN11694-11694
Publication Date(Web):2012/10/15
DOI:10.1039/C2CC35968E
A ferredoxin associated with biological Fe–S cluster assembly has been remodelled to transfer electrons to a P450 enzyme and support substrate oxidation at 80% of the physiological ferredoxin activity, opening up the possibility of tailoring ferredoxins to reconstitute the activity of P450 enzymes for which the electron transfer partner proteins are not known.
Co-reporter:Stephen G. Bell, Wen Yang, Adrian B. H. Tan, Ruimin Zhou, Eachan O. D. Johnson, Aili Zhang, Weihong Zhou, Zihe Rao and Luet-Lok Wong
Dalton Transactions 2012 - vol. 41(Issue 28) pp:NaN8714-8714
Publication Date(Web):2012/05/18
DOI:10.1039/C2DT30783A
The crystal structures of the 4-methoxybenzoate bound forms of cytochrome P450 enzymes CYP199A2 and CYP199A4 from the Rhodopseudomonas palustris strains CGA009 and HaA2 have been solved. The structures of these two enzymes, which share 86% sequence identity, are very similar though some differences are found on the proximal surface. In these structures the enzymes have a closed conformation, in contrast to the substrate-free form of CYP199A2 where an obvious substrate access channel is observed. The switch from an open to a closed conformation arises from pronounced residue side-chain movements and alterations of ion pair and hydrogen bonding interactions at the entrance of the access channel. A chloride ion bound just inside the protein surface caps the entrance to the active site and protects the substrate and the heme from the external solvent. In both structures the substrate is held in place via hydrophobic and hydrogen bond interactions. The methoxy group is located over the heme iron, accounting for the high activity and selectivity of these enzymes for oxidative demethylation of the substrate. Mutagenesis studies on CYP199A4 highlight the involvement of hydrophobic (Phe185) and hydrophilic (Arg92, Ser95 and Arg243) amino acid residues in the binding of para-substituted benzoates by these enzymes.
Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse, Wen Yang, Jake A. Yorke, Henry G. Tufton, Lydia C. I. Ogilvie, Stephen G. Bell, Weihong Zhou, Mark Bartlam, Zihe Rao and Luet-Lok Wong
Dalton Transactions 2011 - vol. 40(Issue 40) pp:NaN10396-10396
Publication Date(Web):2011/05/20
DOI:10.1039/C1DT10098J
The substrate-free crystal structure of a five-mutation directed evolution variant of CYP102A1 (P450BM3) with generic activity-enhancing properties (“KT2”) has been determined to 1.9-Å resolution. There is a close resemblance to substrate-bound structures of the wild-type enzyme (WT). The disruption of two salt bridges that link the G- and I-helices in WT causes conformational changes that break several hydrogen bonds and reduce the angle of the kink in the I-helix where dioxygen activation is thought to take place. The side-chain of a key active site residue, Phe87, is rotated in one molecule of the asymmetric unit, and the side-chains of Phe158 and Phe261 cascade into the orientations found in fatty-acid-bound forms of the enzyme. The iron is out of the porphyrin plane, towards the proximal cysteine. Unusually, the axial water ligand to the haem iron is not hydrogen-bonded to Ala264. The first electron transfer from the reductase domain to the haem domain of substrate-free KT2 is almost as fast as in palmitate-bound WT even though the reduction potential of the haem domain is only slightly more oxidising than that of substrate-free WT. However, NADPH is turned over slowly in the absence of substrate, so the catalytic cycle is gated by a step subsequent to the first electron transfer—a contrast to WT. Propylbenzene binding slightly raises the first electron transfer rate in WT but not in KT2. It is proposed that the generic rate accelerating properties of KT2 arise from the substrate-free form being in a catalytically ready conformation, such that substrate-induced changes to the structure play a less significant role in promoting the first electron transfer than in WT.
Co-reporter:Christopher J. C. Whitehouse, Stephen G. Bell and Luet-Lok Wong
Chemical Society Reviews 2012 - vol. 41(Issue 3) pp:NaN1260-1260
Publication Date(Web):2011/10/18
DOI:10.1039/C1CS15192D
P450BM3 (CYP102A1), a fatty acid hydroxylase from Bacillus megaterium, has been extensively studied over a period of almost forty years. The enzyme has been redesigned to catalyse the oxidation of non-natural substrates as diverse as pharmaceuticals, terpenes and gaseous alkanes using a variety of engineering strategies. Crystal structures have provided a basis for several of the catalytic effects brought about by mutagenesis, while changes to reduction potentials, inter-domain electron transfer rates and catalytic parameters have yielded functional insights. Areas of active research interest include drug metabolite production, the development of process-scale techniques, unravelling general mechanistic aspects of P450 chemistry, methane oxidation, and improving selectivity control to allow the synthesis of fine chemicals. This review draws together the disparate research themes and places them in a historical context with the aim of creating a resource that can be used as a gateway to the field.
Benzene, (2,4-cyclopentadien-1-ylidenemethyl)-
Tantalum, trichlorodimethyl-
1,2,3,5,5 And 1,2,4,5,5-pentamethylcyclopentadiene mixture
Cyclobutene
Tantalum, dichlorotrimethyl-
Dimethylcirconocene
Titanium,trichloromethyl-, (T-4)- (9CI)
SPIRO[2.4]HEPTA-4,6-DIENE
Tri-n-butyltin deuteride