Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas 79409, United States.
J Phys Chem B. 2023 Oct 19;127(41):8809-8824. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c04589. Epub 2023 Oct 5.
Unspecific peroxygenases (UPOs) can selectively oxyfunctionalize unactivated hydrocarbons by using peroxides under mild conditions. They circumvent the oxygen dilemma faced by cytochrome P450s and exhibit greater stability than the latter. As such, they hold great potential for industrial applications. A thorough understanding of their catalysis is needed to improve their catalytic performance. However, it remains elusive how UPOs effectively convert peroxide to Compound I (CpdI), the principal oxidizing intermediate in the catalytic cycle. Previous computational studies of this process primarily focused on heme peroxidases and P450s, which have significant differences in the active site from UPOs. Additionally, the roles of peroxide unbinding in the kinetics of CpdI formation, which is essential for interpreting existing experiments, have been understudied. Moreover, there has been a lack of free energy characterizations with explicit sampling of protein and hydration dynamics, which is critical for understanding the thermodynamics of the proton transport (PT) events involved in CpdI formation. To bridge these gaps, we employed multiscale simulations to comprehensively characterize the CpdI formation in wild-type UPO from (UPO). Extensive free energy and potential energy calculations were performed in a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics setting. Our results indicate that substrate-binding dehydrates the active site, impeding the PT from HO to a nearby catalytic base (Glu196). Furthermore, the PT is coupled with considerable hydrogen bond network rearrangements near the active site, facilitating subsequent O-O bond cleavage. Finally, large unbinding free energy barriers kinetically stabilize HO at the active site. These findings reveal a delicate balance among PT, hydration dynamics, hydrogen bond rearrangement, and cosubstrate unbinding, which collectively enable efficient CpdI formation. Our simulation results are consistent with kinetic measurements and offer new insights into the CpdI formation mechanism at atomic-level details, which can potentially aid the design of next-generation biocatalysts for sustainable chemical transformations of feedstocks.
非特异性过氧化物酶 (UPO) 可以在温和条件下使用过氧化物选择性地氧化未活化的烃类。它们规避了细胞色素 P450 面临的氧气困境,并且比后者更稳定。因此,它们在工业应用中具有很大的潜力。为了提高它们的催化性能,需要深入了解它们的催化作用。然而,UPO 如何有效地将过氧化物转化为催化循环中的主要氧化中间体复合物 I (CpdI) 仍然难以捉摸。以前对这一过程的计算研究主要集中在血红素过氧化物酶和 P450 上,它们在活性位点上与 UPO 有很大的不同。此外,对于解释现有实验至关重要的 CpdI 形成动力学中过氧化物解缚的作用,研究得还不够充分。此外,缺乏明确采样蛋白质和水合动力学的自由能特征,这对于理解 CpdI 形成涉及的质子传输 (PT) 事件的热力学至关重要。为了弥补这些差距,我们采用多尺度模拟来全面表征来自 (UPO) 的野生型 UPO 中的 CpdI 形成。在量子力学/分子力学环境中进行了广泛的自由能和势能计算。我们的结果表明,底物结合使活性位点脱水,阻碍了从 HO 到附近催化碱 (Glu196) 的 PT。此外,PT 与活性位点附近相当大的氢键网络重排耦合,促进随后的 O-O 键断裂。最后,大的解缚自由能势垒在动力学上稳定了活性位点上的 HO。这些发现揭示了 PT、水合动力学、氢键重排和共底物解缚之间的微妙平衡,这些因素共同促进了高效的 CpdI 形成。我们的模拟结果与动力学测量结果一致,并提供了在原子细节水平上对 CpdI 形成机制的新见解,这可能有助于设计下一代生物催化剂,用于可持续地转化原料。