Center for Biological Physics, Department of Physics, Arizona State University.
Departamento de Química Física, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain.
Mol Biol Evol. 2015 Jan;32(1):132-43. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msu281. Epub 2014 Oct 13.
β-Lactamases are produced by many modern bacteria as a mechanism of resistance toward β-lactam antibiotics, the most common antibiotics in use. β-Lactamases, however, are ancient enzymes that originated billions of years ago. Recently, proteins corresponding to 2- to 3-Gy-old Precambrian nodes in the evolution of Class A β-lactamases have been prepared and shown to be moderately efficient promiscuous catalysts, able to degrade a variety of antibiotics with catalytic efficiency levels similar to those of an average modern enzyme. Remarkably, there are few structural differences (in particular at the active-site regions) between the resurrected enzymes and a penicillin-specialist modern β-lactamase. Here, we propose that the ancestral promiscuity originates from conformational dynamics. We investigate the differences in conformational dynamics of the ancient and extant β-lactamases through MD simulations and quantify the contribution of each position to functionally related dynamics through Dynamic Flexibility Index. The modern TEM-1 lactamase shows a comparatively rigid active-site region, likely reflecting adaptation for efficient degradation of a specific substrate (penicillin), whereas enhanced deformability at the active-site neighborhood in the ancestral resurrected proteins likely accounts for the binding and subsequent degradation of antibiotic molecules of different size and shape. Clustering of the conformational dynamics on the basis of Principal Component Analysis is in agreement with the functional divergence, as the ancient β-lactamases cluster together, separated from their modern descendant. Finally, our analysis leads to testable predictions, as sites of potential relevance for the evolution of dynamics are identified and mutations at those sites are expected to alter substrate-specificity.
β-内酰胺酶是许多现代细菌产生的一种抵抗β-内酰胺类抗生素的机制,β-内酰胺类抗生素是目前使用最广泛的抗生素。然而,β-内酰胺酶是古老的酶,起源于数十亿年前。最近,已经制备出对应于 A 类β-内酰胺酶演化过程中 2 到 3 亿年前的前寒武纪节点的蛋白质,并证明它们是中等效率的杂化催化剂,能够降解各种抗生素,其催化效率与现代平均酶相似。值得注意的是,复活的酶与青霉素专家型现代β-内酰胺酶之间几乎没有结构差异(特别是在活性部位区域)。在这里,我们提出祖先的多功能性源于构象动力学。我们通过 MD 模拟研究了古代和现存β-内酰胺酶的构象动力学差异,并通过动态灵活性指数量化了每个位置对功能相关动力学的贡献。现代 TEM-1 内酰胺酶的活性部位区域表现出相对刚性,这可能反映了对特定底物(青霉素)高效降解的适应性,而在祖先复活的蛋白质中活性部位附近的可变形性增强可能解释了不同大小和形状的抗生素分子的结合和随后的降解。基于主成分分析的构象动力学聚类与功能分化一致,因为古老的β-内酰胺酶聚类在一起,与现代后代分开。最后,我们的分析导致了可测试的预测,因为确定了与动力学进化相关的潜在重要位点,并且预计这些位点的突变会改变底物特异性。