Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University , B400 Beckman Center, 279 Campus Drive, Stanford, California 94305, United States.
Biochemistry. 2014 Apr 22;53(15):2541-55. doi: 10.1021/bi401671t. Epub 2014 Apr 9.
The positioning of catalytic groups within proteins plays an important role in enzyme catalysis, and here we investigate the positioning of the general base in the enzyme ketosteroid isomerase (KSI). The oxygen atoms of Asp38, the general base in KSI, were previously shown to be involved in anion-aromatic interactions with two neighboring Phe residues. Here we ask whether those interactions are sufficient, within the overall protein architecture, to position Asp38 for catalysis or whether the side chains that pack against Asp38 and/or the residues of the structured loop that is capped by Asp38 are necessary to achieve optimal positioning for catalysis. To test positioning, we mutated each of the aforementioned residues, alone and in combinations, in a background with the native Asp general base and in a D38E mutant background, as Glu at position 38 was previously shown to be mispositioned for general base catalysis. These double-mutant cycles reveal positioning effects as large as 10(3)-fold, indicating that structural features in addition to the overall protein architecture and the Phe residues neighboring the carboxylate oxygen atoms play roles in positioning. X-ray crystallography and molecular dynamics simulations suggest that the functional effects arise from both restricting dynamic fluctuations and disfavoring potential mispositioned states. Whereas it may have been anticipated that multiple interactions would be necessary for optimal general base positioning, the energetic contributions from positioning and the nonadditive nature of these interactions are not revealed by structural inspection and require functional dissection. Recognizing the extent, type, and energetic interconnectivity of interactions that contribute to positioning catalytic groups has implications for enzyme evolution and may help reveal the nature and extent of interactions required to design enzymes that rival those found in biology.
催化基团在蛋白质中的定位在酶催化中起着重要作用,在这里我们研究了酶酮固醇异构酶(KSI)中通用碱基的定位。先前已经表明,KSI 中的通用碱基 Asp38 的氧原子与两个相邻的 Phe 残基参与阴离子-芳香相互作用。在这里,我们想知道这些相互作用是否足以在整个蛋白质结构中为催化作用定位 Asp38,还是与 Asp38 相抗衡的侧链和/或由 Asp38 封闭的结构环的残基对于实现最佳催化作用定位是必要的。为了测试定位,我们在具有天然 Asp 通用碱基的背景下和 D38E 突变体背景下,单独和组合突变了上述残基中的每一个,因为先前已经表明位置 38 的 Glu 对于通用碱基催化作用的定位不正确。这些双突变循环揭示了高达 10(3)倍的定位效应,表明除了整体蛋白质结构和相邻羧基氧原子的 Phe 残基外,结构特征在定位中也起着作用。X 射线晶体学和分子动力学模拟表明,功能效应既源于限制动态波动,又不利于潜在的错误定位状态。尽管可能预期多个相互作用对于最佳通用碱基定位是必要的,但定位的能量贡献和这些相互作用的非加性性质不能通过结构检查揭示,需要功能剖析。认识到有助于定位催化基团的相互作用的程度、类型和能量相互连接性,对于酶进化具有重要意义,并且可能有助于揭示设计与生物学中发现的酶相媲美的酶所需的相互作用的性质和程度。