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Ground-State Destabilization by Active-Site Hydrophobicity Controls the Selectivity of a Cofactor-Free Decarboxylase

Biler, Michal ; Crean, Rory M ; Schweiger, Anna K ; Kourist, Robert and Kamerlin, Shina Caroline Lynn LU orcid (2020) In Journal of the American Chemical Society 142(47). p.20216-20231
Abstract

Bacterial arylmalonate decarboxylase (AMDase) and evolved variants have become a valuable tool with which to access both enantiomers of a broad range of chiral arylaliphatic acids with high optical purity. Yet, the molecular principles responsible for the substrate scope, activity, and selectivity of this enzyme are only poorly understood to date, greatly hampering the predictability and design of improved enzyme variants for specific applications. In this work, empirical valence bond and metadynamics simulations were performed on wild-type AMDase and variants thereof to obtain a better understanding of the underlying molecular processes determining reaction outcome. Our results clearly reproduce the experimentally observed substrate... (More)

Bacterial arylmalonate decarboxylase (AMDase) and evolved variants have become a valuable tool with which to access both enantiomers of a broad range of chiral arylaliphatic acids with high optical purity. Yet, the molecular principles responsible for the substrate scope, activity, and selectivity of this enzyme are only poorly understood to date, greatly hampering the predictability and design of improved enzyme variants for specific applications. In this work, empirical valence bond and metadynamics simulations were performed on wild-type AMDase and variants thereof to obtain a better understanding of the underlying molecular processes determining reaction outcome. Our results clearly reproduce the experimentally observed substrate scope and support a mechanism driven by ground-state destabilization of the carboxylate group being cleaved by the enzyme. In addition, our results indicate that, in the case of the nonconverted or poorly converted substrates studied in this work, increased solvent exposure of the active site upon binding of these substrates can disturb the vulnerable network of interactions responsible for facilitating the AMDase-catalyzed cleavage of CO2. Finally, our results indicate a switch from preferential cleavage of the pro-(R) to the pro-(S) carboxylate group in the CLG-IPL variant of AMDase for all substrates studied. This appears to be due to the emergence of a new hydrophobic pocket generated by the insertion of the six amino acid substitutions, into which the pro-(S) carboxylate binds. Our results allow insight into the tight interaction network determining AMDase selectivity, which in turn provides guidance for the identification of target residues for future enzyme engineering.

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author
; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
keywords
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry, Binding Sites, Biocatalysis, Bordetella/enzymology, Carbon Dioxide/chemistry, Carboxy-Lyases/chemistry, Catalytic Domain, Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Mutagenesis, Site-Directed, Quantum Theory, Thermodynamics
in
Journal of the American Chemical Society
volume
142
issue
47
pages
16 pages
publisher
The American Chemical Society (ACS)
external identifiers
  • pmid:33180505
  • scopus:85096883139
ISSN
1520-5126
DOI
10.1021/jacs.0c10701
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
74bf801f-1da8-42de-b661-50680f396fda
date added to LUP
2025-01-11 18:52:42
date last changed
2025-06-15 15:59:09
@article{74bf801f-1da8-42de-b661-50680f396fda,
  abstract     = {{<p>Bacterial arylmalonate decarboxylase (AMDase) and evolved variants have become a valuable tool with which to access both enantiomers of a broad range of chiral arylaliphatic acids with high optical purity. Yet, the molecular principles responsible for the substrate scope, activity, and selectivity of this enzyme are only poorly understood to date, greatly hampering the predictability and design of improved enzyme variants for specific applications. In this work, empirical valence bond and metadynamics simulations were performed on wild-type AMDase and variants thereof to obtain a better understanding of the underlying molecular processes determining reaction outcome. Our results clearly reproduce the experimentally observed substrate scope and support a mechanism driven by ground-state destabilization of the carboxylate group being cleaved by the enzyme. In addition, our results indicate that, in the case of the nonconverted or poorly converted substrates studied in this work, increased solvent exposure of the active site upon binding of these substrates can disturb the vulnerable network of interactions responsible for facilitating the AMDase-catalyzed cleavage of CO2. Finally, our results indicate a switch from preferential cleavage of the pro-(R) to the pro-(S) carboxylate group in the CLG-IPL variant of AMDase for all substrates studied. This appears to be due to the emergence of a new hydrophobic pocket generated by the insertion of the six amino acid substitutions, into which the pro-(S) carboxylate binds. Our results allow insight into the tight interaction network determining AMDase selectivity, which in turn provides guidance for the identification of target residues for future enzyme engineering.</p>}},
  author       = {{Biler, Michal and Crean, Rory M and Schweiger, Anna K and Kourist, Robert and Kamerlin, Shina Caroline Lynn}},
  issn         = {{1520-5126}},
  keywords     = {{Bacterial Proteins/chemistry; Binding Sites; Biocatalysis; Bordetella/enzymology; Carbon Dioxide/chemistry; Carboxy-Lyases/chemistry; Catalytic Domain; Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Quantum Theory; Thermodynamics}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  number       = {{47}},
  pages        = {{20216--20231}},
  publisher    = {{The American Chemical Society (ACS)}},
  series       = {{Journal of the American Chemical Society}},
  title        = {{Ground-State Destabilization by Active-Site Hydrophobicity Controls the Selectivity of a Cofactor-Free Decarboxylase}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c10701}},
  doi          = {{10.1021/jacs.0c10701}},
  volume       = {{142}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}