Litcius/Paper detail

Underlying Role of Hydrophobic Environments in Tuning Metal Elements for Efficient Enzyme Catalysis

Hyunuk Eom, Yuanxin Cao, Hyunsoo Kim, Sam P. de Visser, Woon Ju Song

2023Journal of the American Chemical Society27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The catalytic functions of metalloenzymes are often strongly correlated with metal elements in the active sites. However, dioxygen-activating nonheme quercetin dioxygenases (QueD) are found with various first-row transition-metal ions when metal swapping inactivates their innate catalytic activity. To unveil the molecular basis of this seemingly promiscuous yet metal-specific enzyme, we transformed manganese-dependent QueD into a nickel-dependent enzyme by sequence- and structure-based directed evolution. Although the net effect of acquired mutations was primarily to rearrange hydrophobic residues in the active site pocket, biochemical, kinetic, X-ray crystallographic, spectroscopic, and computational studies suggest that these modifications in the secondary coordination spheres can adjust the electronic structure of the enzyme-substrate complex to counteract the effects induced by the metal substitution. These results explicitly demonstrate that such noncovalent interactions encrypt metal specificity in a finely modulated manner, revealing the underestimated chemical power of the hydrophobic sequence network in enzyme catalysis.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryActive siteCatalysisMetalEnzymeNon-covalent interactionsSubstrate (aquarium)Enzyme catalysisTransition metalManganeseSequence (biology)Combinatorial chemistryStereochemistryMoleculeOrganic chemistryBiochemistryGeologyOceanographyHydrogen bondMetal-Catalyzed Oxygenation MechanismsEnzyme Catalysis and ImmobilizationMetal complexes synthesis and properties