Co-reporter:Zeyu Peng, Maria D. R. Peralta, and Michael D. Toney
Biochemistry November 14, 2017 Volume 56(Issue 45) pp:6041-6041
Publication Date(Web):October 24, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00364
The self-assembly of biological molecules into ordered nanostructures is an attractive method for fabricating novel nanomaterials. Nucleic acid-based nanostructures suffer from limitations to functionalization and stability. Alternatively, protein-based nanostructures have advantageous chemical properties, but design facility lags behind that of nucleic acids. Structurally defined fibrils engineered from β-solenoid proteins (BSPs) form under mild conditions [Peralta, M. D. R., et al. (2015) ACS Nano 9, 449–463] and are good candidates for novel nanomaterials because of the defined sequence-to-structure relationship and tunable properties. Here, the stability of two types of engineered fibrils was examined using circular dichroism spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and electrophoresis. Both are stable to at least 90 °C, and one survives autoclaving. They are stable toward organic solvents, urea, and pH extremes. One is even stable in 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate with heating. The fibrils show variable resistance to proteolytic digestion: one is resistant to trypsin, but chymotrypsin and proteinase K degrade both. These results show that BSPs have excellent potential for bottom-up design of rugged, functional, amyloid-based nanomaterials.
Co-reporter:Justin E. Culbertson, Dong hee Chung, Kristin T. Ziebart, Eduardo Espiritu, and Michael D. Toney
Biochemistry 2015 Volume 54(Issue 14) pp:2372-2384
Publication Date(Web):February 24, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00013
The central importance of chorismate enzymes in bacteria, fungi, parasites, and plants combined with their absence in mammals makes them attractive targets for antimicrobials and herbicides. Two of these enzymes, anthranilate synthase (AS) and aminodeoxychorismate synthase (ADCS), are structurally and mechanistically similar. The first catalytic step, amination at C2, is common between them, but AS additionally catalyzes pyruvate elimination, aromatizing the aminated intermediate to anthranilate. Despite prior attempts, the conversion of a pyruvate elimination-deficient enzyme into an elimination-proficient one has not been reported. Janus, a bioinformatics method for predicting mutations required to functionally interconvert homologous enzymes, was employed to predict mutations to convert ADCS into AS. A genetic selection on a library of Janus-predicted mutations was performed. Complementation of an AS-deficient strain of Escherichia coli grown on minimal medium led to several ADCS mutants that allow growth in 6 days compared to 2 days for wild-type AS. The purified mutant enzymes catalyze the conversion of chorismate to anthranilate at rates that are ∼50% of the rate of wild-type ADCS-catalyzed conversion of chorismate to aminodeoxychorismate. The residues mutated do not contact the substrate. Molecular dynamics studies suggest that pyruvate elimination is controlled by the conformation of the C2-aminated intermediate. Enzymes that catalyze elimination favor the equatorial conformation, which presents the C2-H to a conserved active site lysine (Lys424) for deprotonation and maximizes stereoelectronic activation. Acid/base catalysis of pyruvate elimination was confirmed in AS and salicylate synthase by showing incorporation of a solvent-derived proton into the pyruvate methyl group and by solvent kinetic isotope effects on pyruvate elimination catalyzed by AS.
Co-reporter:Michael D. Toney ; Joan Nieto Castro ;Trevor A. Addington
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 135(Issue 7) pp:2509-2511
Publication Date(Web):February 1, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja3101243
The catalytic effects of perdeuterating the pyridoxal phosphate-dependent enzyme alanine racemase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus are reported. The mass of the heavy perdeuterated form is ∼5.5% greater than that of the protiated form, causing kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) of ∼1.3 on kcat and kcat/KM for both l- and d-alanine. These values increase when Cα-deuterated alanine is used as the substrate. The heavy-enzyme KIEs of ∼3 on kcat/KM with deuterated substrates are greater than the product of the individual heavy-enzyme and primary substrate KIEs. This breakdown of the rule of the geometric mean is likely due to coupled motion between the protein and the proton-transfer reaction coordinate in the rate-limiting step. These data implicate a direct role for protein vibrational motions in barrier crossing for proton-transfer steps in alanine racemase.
Co-reporter:Michael D. Toney
Biochemistry 2013 Volume 52(Issue 34) pp:
Publication Date(Web):August 1, 2013
DOI:10.1021/bi400696j
The determination of a complete set of rate constants [free energy profiles (FEPs)] for a complex kinetic mechanism is challenging. Enzymologists have devised a variety of informative steady-state kinetic experiments (e.g., Michaelis–Menten kinetics, viscosity dependence of kinetic parameters, kinetic isotope effects, etc.) that each provide distinct information regarding a particular kinetic system. A simple method for combining steady-state experiments in a single analysis is presented here, which allows microscopic rate constants and intrinsic kinetic isotope effects to be determined. It is first shown that Michaelis–Menten kinetic parameters (kcat and Km values), kinetic isotope efffets, solvent viscosity effects, and intermediate partitioning measurements are sufficient to define the rate constants for a reversible uni-uni mechanism with an intermediate, EZ, between the ES and EP complexes. Global optimization provides the framework for combining the independent experimental measurements, and the search for rate constants is performed using algorithms implemented in the biochemical software COPASI. This method is applied to the determination of FEPs for both alanine racemase and triosephosphate isomerase. The FEPs obtained from global optimization agree with those in the literature, with important exceptions. The method opens the door to routine and large-scale determination of FEPs for enzymes.
Co-reporter:Wait R. Griswold ; Joan Nieto Castro ; Andrew J. Fisher
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2012 Volume 134(Issue 20) pp:8436-8438
Publication Date(Web):May 2, 2012
DOI:10.1021/ja302809e
Binding isotope effects for l-aspartate reacting with the inactive K258A mutant of PLP-dependent aspartate aminotransferase to give a stable external aldimine intermediate are reported. They provide direct evidence for electronic ground-state destabilization via hyperconjugation. The smaller equilibrium isotope effect with deazaPLP-reconstituted K258A indicates that the pyridine nitrogen plays an important role in labilizing the Cα–H bond.
Co-reporter:Wait R. Griswold
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 37) pp:14823-14830
Publication Date(Web):August 9, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja2061006
Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP; vitamin B6)-catalyzed reactions have been well studied, both on enzymes and in solution, due to the variety of important reactions this cofactor catalyzes in nitrogen metabolism. Three functional groups are central to PLP catalysis: the C4′ aldehyde, the O3′ phenol, and the N1 pyridine nitrogen. In the literature, the pyridine nitrogen has traditionally been assumed to be protonated in enzyme active sites, with the protonated pyridine ring providing resonance stabilization of carbanionic intermediates. This assumption is certainly correct for some PLP enzymes, but the structures of other active sites are incompatible with protonation of N1, and, consequently, these enzymes are expected to use PLP in the N1-unprotonated form. For example, aspartate aminotransferase protonates the pyridine nitrogen for catalysis of transamination, while both alanine racemase and O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase are expected to maintain N1 in the unprotonated, formally neutral state for catalysis of racemization and β-elimination. Herein, kinetic results for these three enzymes reconstituted with 1-deazapyridoxal 5′-phosphate, an isosteric analogue of PLP lacking the pyridine nitrogen, are compared to those for the PLP enzyme forms. They demonstrate that the pyridine nitrogen is vital to the 1,3-prototropic shift central to transamination, but not to reactions catalyzed by alanine racemase or O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase. Not all PLP enzymes require the electrophilicity of a protonated pyridine ring to enable formation of carbanionic intermediates. It is proposed that modulation of cofactor electrophilicity plays a central role in controlling reaction specificity in PLP enzymes.
Co-reporter:Wait R. Griswold, Andrew J. Fisher, and Michael D. Toney
Biochemistry 2011 Volume 50(Issue 26) pp:
Publication Date(Web):May 31, 2011
DOI:10.1021/bi200436y
The 1.8 Å resolution crystal structures of Escherichia coli aspartate aminotransferase reconstituted with 1-deazapyridoxal 5′-phosphate (deazaPLP; 2-formyl-3-hydroxy-4-methylbenzyl phosphate) in the internal aldimine and l-aspartate external aldimine forms are reported. The l-aspartate·deazaPLP external aldimine is extraordinarily stable (half-life of >20 days), allowing crystals of this intermediate to be grown by cocrystallization with l-aspartate. This structure is compared to that of the α-methyl-l-aspartate·PLP external aldimine. Overlays with the corresponding pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) aldimines show very similar orientations of deazaPLP with respect to PLP. The lack of a hydrogen bond between Asp222 and deazaPLP, which serves to “anchor” PLP in the active site, releases strain in the deazaPLP internal aldimine that is enforced in the PLP internal aldimine [Hayashi, H., Mizuguchi, H., Miyahara, I., Islam, M. M., Ikushiro, H., Nakajima, Y., Hirotsu, K., and Kagamiyama, H. (2003) Biochim. Biophys. Acta1647, 103] as evidenced by the planarity of the pyridine ring and the Schiff base linkage with Lys258. Additionally, loss of this anchor causes a 10° greater tilt of deazaPLP toward the substrate in the external aldimine. An important mechanistic difference between the l-aspartate·deazaPLP and α-methyl-l-aspartate·PLP external aldimines is a hydrogen bond between Gly38 and Lys258 in the former, positioning the catalytic base above and approximately equidistant between Cα and C4′. In contrast, in the α-methyl-l-aspartate·PLP external aldimine, the ε-amino group of Lys258 is rotated ∼70° to form a hydrogen bond to Tyr70 because of the steric bulk of the methyl group.
Co-reporter:Emily J. Fogle, Michael D. Toney
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics 2011 Volume 1814(Issue 9) pp:1113-1119
Publication Date(Web):September 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.bbapap.2011.05.014
Diaminopimelate decarboxylase (DAPDC) and ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) are pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzymes that are critical to microbial growth and pathogenicity. The latter is the target of drugs that cure African sleeping sickness, while the former is an attractive target for antibacterials. These two enzymes share the (β/α)8 (i.e., TIM barrel) fold with alanine racemase, another pyridoxal 5'-phosphate dependent enzyme critical to bacterial survival. The active site structural homology between DAPDC and ODC is striking even though DAPDC catalyzes the decarboxylation of a D stereocenter with inversion of configuration and ODC catalyzes the decarboxylation of an L stereocenter with retention of configuration. Here, the structural and mechanistic bases of these interesting properties are explored using reactions of alternate substrates with both enzymes. It is concluded that simple binding determinants do not control the observed stereochemical specificities for decarboxylation, and a concerted decarboxylation/proton transfer at Cα of the D stereocenter of diaminopimelate is a possible mechanism for the observed specificity with DAPDC.Research highlights► The stereospecificity of DAPDC and ODC has been analyzed using alternate substrates. ► Simple binding determinants do not control reactivity. ► A concerted transition state is proposed for DAPDC to explain its stereospecificity.
Co-reporter:Melissa P. Hill ; Elizabeth C. Carroll ; Mai C. Vang ; Trevor A. Addington ; Michael D. Toney ;Delmar S. Larsen
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2010 Volume 132(Issue 47) pp:16953-16961
Publication Date(Web):November 8, 2010
DOI:10.1021/ja107054x
The mechanisms of pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymes require substrates to form covalent “external aldimine” intermediates, which absorb light strongly between 410 and 430 nm. Aspartate aminotransferase (AAT) is a prototypical PLP-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the reversible interconversion of aspartate and α-ketoglutarate with oxalacetate and glutamate. From kinetic isotope effects studies, it is known that deprotonation of the aspartate external aldimine Cα−H bond to give a carbanionic quinonoid intermediate is partially rate limiting in the thermal AAT reaction. We show that excitation of the 430-nm external aldimine absorption band increases the steady-state catalytic activity of AAT, which is attributed to the photoenhancement of Cα−H deprotonation on the basis of studies with Schiff bases in solution. Blue light (250 mW) illumination gives an observed 2.3-fold rate enhancement for WT AAT activity, a 530-fold enhancement for the inactive K258A mutant, and a 58600-fold enhancement for the PLP-Asp Schiff base in water. These different levels of enhancement correlate with the intrinsic reactivities of the Cα−H bond in the different environments, with the less reactive Schiff bases exhibiting greater enhancement. Time-resolved spectroscopy, ranging from femtoseconds to minutes, was used to investigate the nature of the photoactivation of Cα−H bond cleavage in PLP-amino acid Schiff bases both in water and bound to AAT. Unlike the thermal pathway, the photoactivation pathway involves a triplet state with a Cα−H pKa that is estimated to be between 11 and 19 units lower than the ground state for the PLP-Val Schiff base in water.
Co-reporter:Kristin T. Ziebart ; Seth M. Dixon ; Belem Avila ; Mohamed H. El-Badri ; Kathryn G. Guggenheim ; Mark J. Kurth
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2010 Volume 53(Issue 9) pp:3718-3729
Publication Date(Web):April 1, 2010
DOI:10.1021/jm100158v
Chorismate-utilizing enzymes are attractive antimicrobial drug targets due to their absence in humans and their central role in bacterial survival and virulence. The structural and mechanistic homology of a group of these inspired the goal of discovering inhibitors that target multiple enzymes. Previously, we discovered seven inhibitors of 4-amino-4-deoxychorismate synthase (ADCS) in an on-bead, fluorescent-based screen of a 2304-member one-bead-one-compound combinatorial library. The inhibitors comprise PAYLOAD and COMBI stages, which interact with active site and surface residues, respectively, and are linked by a SPACER stage. These seven compounds, and six derivatives thereof, also inhibit two other enzymes in this family, isochorismate synthase (IS) and anthranilate synthase (AS). The best binding compound inhibits ADCS, IS, and AS with Ki values of 720, 56, and 80 μM, respectively. Inhibitors with varying SPACER lengths show the original choice of lysine to be optimal. Lastly, inhibition data confirm the PAYLOAD stage directs the inhibitors to the ADCS active site.
Co-reporter:Kristin T. Ziebart and Michael D. Toney
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 13) pp:
Publication Date(Web):February 19, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi100021x
Anthranilate synthase (AS), aminodeoxychorismate synthase (ADCS), isochorismate synthase (IS), and salicylate synthase (SS) are structurally homologous chorismate-utilizing enzymes that carry out the first committed step in the formation of tryptophan, folate, and the siderophores enterobactin and mycobactin, respectively. Each enzyme catalyzes a nucleophilic substitution reaction, but IS and SS are uniquely able to employ water as a nucleophile. Lys147 has been proposed to be the catalytic base that activates water for nucleophilic attack in IS and SS reactions; in AS and ADCS, glutamine occupies the analogous position. To probe the role of Lys147 as a catalytic base, the K147Q IS, K147Q SS, Q147K AS, and Q147K ADCS mutants were prepared and enzyme reactions were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography. Q147K AS employs water as a nucleophile to a small extent, and the cognate activities of K147Q IS and K147Q SS were reduced ∼25- and ∼50-fold, respectively. Therefore, Lys147 is not solely responsible for activation of water as a nucleophile. Additional factors that contribute to water activation are proposed. A change in substrate preference for K147Q SS pyruvate lyase activity indicates Lys147 partially controls SS reaction specificity. Finally, we demonstrate that AS, ADCS, IS, and SS do not possess chorismate mutase promiscuous activity, contrary to several previous reports.
Co-reporter:Emily J. Fogle and Michael D. Toney
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 30) pp:
Publication Date(Web):June 11, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi100648w
Pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymes catalyze many different types of reactions at the α-, β-, and γ-carbons of amine and amino acid substrates. Dialkylglycine decarboxylase (DGD) is an unusual PLP-dependent enzyme that catalyzes two reaction types, decarboxylation and transamination, in the same active site. A structurally based, functional model has been proposed for the DGD active site, which maintains that R406 is important in determining substrate specificity through interactions with the substrate carboxylate while W138 provides specificity for short-chain alkyl groups. The mechanistic roles of R406 and W138 were investigated using site-directed mutagenesis, alternate substrates, and analysis of steady-state and half-reaction kinetics. Experiments with the R406M and R406K mutants confirm the importance of R406 in substrate binding. Surprisingly, this work also shows that the positive charge of R406 facilitates catalysis of decarboxylation. The W138F mutant demonstrates that W138 indeed acts to limit the size of the subsite C binding pocket, determining specificity for 2,2-dialkylglycines with small side chains as predicted by the model. Finally, work with the double mutant W138F/M141R shows that these mutations expand substrate specificity to include l-glutamate and lead to an increase in specificity for l-glutamate over 2-aminoisobutyrate of approximately 8 orders of magnitude compared to that of wild-type DGD.
Co-reporter:Wait R. Griswold, Michael D. Toney
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 2010 Volume 20(Issue 4) pp:1352-1354
Publication Date(Web):15 February 2010
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2010.01.002
The first synthesis of 1-deaza-pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (2-formyl-3-hydroxy-4-methylbenzyl phosphate) is described. The chemoenzymatic approach described here is a reliable route to this important isosteric pyridoxal phosphate analogue. This work enables elucidation of the role of the pyridine nitrogen in pyridoxal 5′-phosphate dependent enzymes.Formation of aspartate aminotransferase internal aldimine with 1-deaza-pyridoxal 5´-phosphate. The free cofactor analogue, λmax ∼350 nm, displays a bathochromic shift upon formation of the internal aldimine, λmax ∼420 nm. The internal aldimine with pyridoxal 5´-phosphate absorbs at ∼430 nm.
Co-reporter:Trevor A. Addington, Robert W. Mertz, Justin B. Siegel, James M. Thompson, ... Michael D. Toney
Journal of Molecular Biology (26 April 2013) Volume 425(Issue 8) pp:1378-1389
Publication Date(Web):26 April 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.jmb.2013.01.034
Identification of residues responsible for functional specificity in enzymes is a challenging and important problem in protein chemistry. Active-site residues are generally easy to identify, but residues outside the active site are also important to catalysis and their identities and roles are more difficult to determine. We report a method based on analysis of multiple sequence alignments, embodied in our program Janus, for predicting mutations required to interconvert structurally related but functionally distinct enzymes. Conversion of aspartate aminotransferase into tyrosine aminotransferase is demonstrated and compared to previous efforts. Incorporation of 35 predicted mutations resulted in an enzyme with the desired substrate specificity but low catalytic activity. A single round of DNA back-shuffling with wild-type aspartate aminotransferase on this variant generated mutants with tyrosine aminotransferase activities better than those previously realized from rational design or directed evolution. Methods such as this, coupled with computational modeling, may prove invaluable in furthering our understanding of enzyme catalysis and engineering.Download high-res image (135KB)Download full-size imageHighlights► Introduces new computational method for identifying functionally relevant residues. ► Janus greatly reduces sequence space needed for conversion of enzyme function. ► Structures of highly active mutants provide examples of redesigned enzymes. ► Computational modeling shown to have potential for screening deleterious mutations.
Co-reporter:Michael D. Toney
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics (15 February 2014) Volume 544() pp:119-127
Publication Date(Web):15 February 2014
DOI:10.1016/j.abb.2013.10.002