Seyedsayamdost Mohammad R, Stubbe JoAnne
Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Methods Enzymol. 2009;462:45-76. doi: 10.1016/S0076-6879(09)62003-6.
Since the discovery of the essential tyrosyl radical (Y*) in E. coli ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), a number of enzymes involved in primary metabolism have been found that use transient or stable tyrosyl (Y) or tryptophanyl (W) radicals in catalysis. These enzymes engage in a myriad of charge transfer reactions that occur with exquisite control and specificity. The unavailability of natural amino acids that can perturb the reduction potential and/or protonation states of redox-active Y or W residues has limited the usefulness of site-directed mutagenesis methods to probe the attendant mechanism of charge transport at these residues. However, recent technologies designed to site-specifically incorporate unnatural amino acids into proteins have now made viable the study of these mechanisms. The class Ia RNR from E. coli serves as a paradigm for enzymes that use amino acid radicals in catalysis. It catalyzes the conversion of nucleotides to deoxynucleotides and utilizes both stable and transient protein radicals. This reaction requires radical transfer from a stable tyrosyl radical (Y(122)) in the beta subunit to an active-site cysteine (C(439)) in the alpha subunit, where nucleotide reduction occurs. The distance between the sites is proposed to be >35 A. A pathway between these sites has been proposed in which transient aromatic amino acid radicals mediate radical transport. To examine the pathway for radical propagation as well as requirements for coupled electron and proton transfers, a suppressor tRNA/aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (RS) pair has been evolved that allows for site-specific incorporation of 3-aminotyrosine (NH(2)Y). NH(2)Y was chosen because it is structurally similar to Y with a similar phenolic pK(a). However, at pH 7, it is more easily oxidized than Y by 190 mV (approximately 4.4 kcal/mol), thus allowing it to act as a radical trap. Here we present the detailed procedures involved in evolving an NH(2)Y-specific RS, assessing its efficiency in NH(2)Y insertion, generating RNR mutants with NH(2)Y at selected sites, and determining the spectroscopic properties of NH(2)Y and the kinetics of its formation.
自从在大肠杆菌核糖核苷酸还原酶(RNR)中发现必需的酪氨酰自由基(Y*)以来,人们发现许多参与初级代谢的酶在催化过程中使用瞬时或稳定的酪氨酰(Y)或色氨酰(W)自由基。这些酶参与了大量电荷转移反应,这些反应以精确的控制和特异性发生。天然氨基酸的不可用性会干扰氧化还原活性Y或W残基的还原电位和/或质子化状态,这限制了定点诱变方法在探究这些残基处伴随的电荷传输机制方面的实用性。然而,最近设计用于将非天然氨基酸位点特异性地掺入蛋白质中的技术,现在使得对这些机制的研究变得可行。来自大肠杆菌的Ia类RNR作为在催化过程中使用氨基酸自由基的酶的范例。它催化核苷酸向脱氧核苷酸的转化,并利用稳定和瞬时的蛋白质自由基。该反应需要自由基从β亚基中的稳定酪氨酰自由基(Y(122))转移到α亚基中的活性位点半胱氨酸(C(439)),核苷酸还原在此处发生。据推测,这些位点之间的距离大于35埃。已经提出了这些位点之间的一条途径,其中瞬时芳香族氨基酸自由基介导自由基传输。为了研究自由基传播途径以及对耦合电子和质子转移的要求,已经进化出了一种抑制性tRNA/氨酰-tRNA合成酶(RS)对,其允许位点特异性地掺入3-氨基酪氨酸(NH(2)Y)。选择NH(2)Y是因为它在结构上与Y相似,具有相似的酚pK(a)。然而,在pH 7时,它比Y更容易被氧化190毫伏(约4.4千卡/摩尔),因此使其能够作为自由基陷阱。在这里,我们展示了进化出一种NH(2)Y特异性RS、评估其在NH(2)Y插入中的效率、在选定位点生成带有NH(2)Y的RNR突变体以及确定NH(2)Y的光谱性质及其形成动力学所涉及的详细程序。