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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 134(39): 16197-206, 2012 Oct 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22871159

RESUMEN

Nucleophilic catalysis is a general strategy for accelerating ester and amide hydrolysis. In natural active sites, nucleophilic elements such as catalytic dyads and triads are usually paired with oxyanion holes for substrate activation, but it is difficult to parse out the independent contributions of these elements or to understand how they emerged in the course of evolution. Here we explore the minimal requirements for esterase activity by computationally designing artificial catalysts using catalytic dyads and oxyanion holes. We found much higher success rates using designed oxyanion holes formed by backbone NH groups rather than by side chains or bridging water molecules and obtained four active designs in different scaffolds by combining this motif with a Cys-His dyad. Following active site optimization, the most active of the variants exhibited a catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(M)) of 400 M(-1) s(-1) for the cleavage of a p-nitrophenyl ester. Kinetic experiments indicate that the active site cysteines are rapidly acylated as programmed by design, but the subsequent slow hydrolysis of the acyl-enzyme intermediate limits overall catalytic efficiency. Moreover, the Cys-His dyads are not properly formed in crystal structures of the designed enzymes. These results highlight the challenges that computational design must overcome to achieve high levels of activity.


Asunto(s)
Biocatálisis , Diseño de Fármacos , Esterasas/química , Esterasas/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Dominio Catalítico , Ésteres , Enlace de Hidrógeno , Hidrólisis , Cinética
2.
Org Biomol Chem ; 7(13): 2716-24, 2009 Jul 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19532987

RESUMEN

The mechanisms of enzyme-catalyzed phosphate transfer and hydrolysis reactions are of great interest due to their importance and abundance in biochemistry. The reaction may proceed in a stepwise fashion, with either a pentavalent phosphorane or a metaphosphate anion intermediate, or by a concerted SN2 mechanism. Despite much theoretical work focused on a few key enzymes, a consensus for the mechanism has not been reached, and examples of all three possibilities have been demonstrated. We have investigated the mechanism of human uridine-cytidine kinase 2 (UCK2, EC 2.7.1.48), which catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate group from ATP to the ribose 5'-hydroxyl of cytidine and uridine. UCK2 is normally expressed in human placenta, but is overexpressed in certain cancer cells, where it is responsible for activating a class of antitumor prodrugs. The UCK2 mechanism was investigated by generating a 2D potential energy surface as a function of the P-O bonds forming and breaking, with energies calculated using a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics potential (B3LYP/6-31G(d):AMBER). The mechanism of phosphate transfer is shown to be concerted, and is accompanied by concerted proton transfer from the 5'-hydroxyl to a conserved active site aspartic acid that serves as a catalytic base. The calculated barrier for this reaction is 15.1 kcal/mol, in relatively good agreement with the experimental barrier of 17.5 kcal/mol. The interactions of the enzyme active site with the reactant, transition state, and product are examined for their implications on the design of anticancer prodrugs or positron emission tomography (PET) reporter probes for this enzyme.


Asunto(s)
Fosfatos/química , Fosfatos/metabolismo , Teoría Cuántica , Termodinámica , Uridina Quinasa/química , Uridina Quinasa/metabolismo , Catálisis , Humanos , Hidrólisis , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Molecular
3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 130(46): 15361-73, 2008 Nov 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18939839

RESUMEN

Many enzymes catalyze reactions with multiple chemical steps, requiring the stabilization of multiple transition states during catalysis. Such enzymes must strike a balance between the conformational reorganization required to stabilize multiple transition states of a reaction and the confines of a preorganized active site in the polypeptide tertiary structure. Here we investigate the compromise between structural reorganization during the catalytic process and preorganization of the active site for a multistep enzyme-catalyzed reaction, the hydrolysis of esters by the Ser-His-Asp/Glu catalytic triad. Quantum mechanical transition states were used to generate ensembles of geometries that can catalyze each individual step in the mechanism. These geometries are compared to each other by superpositions of catalytic atoms to find "consensus" geometries that can catalyze all steps with minimal rearrangement. These consensus geometries are found to be excellent matches for the natural active site. Preorganization is therefore found to be the major defining characteristic of the active site, and reorganizational motions often proposed to promote catalysis have been minimized. The variability of enzyme active sites observed by X-ray crystallography was also investigated empirically. A catalog of geometrical parameters relating active site residues to each other and to bound inhibitors was collected from a set of crystal structures. The crystal-structure-derived values were then compared to the ranges found in quantum mechanically optimized structures along the entire reaction coordinate. The empirical ranges are found to encompass the theoretical ranges when thermal fluctuations are taken into account. Therefore, the active sites are preorganized to a geometry that can be objectively and quantitatively defined as minimizing conformational reorganization while maintaining optimal transition state stabilization for every step during catalysis. The results provide a useful guiding principle for de novo design of enzymes with multistep mechanisms.


Asunto(s)
Dominio Catalítico , Esterasas/química , Esterasas/metabolismo , Biocatálisis , Butirilcolinesterasa/química , Butirilcolinesterasa/metabolismo , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína
4.
Protein Sci ; 16(9): 1851-66, 2007 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17766382

RESUMEN

Quantum mechanical optimizations of theoretical enzymes (theozymes), which are predicted catalytic arrays of biological functionalities stabilizing a transition state, have been carried out for a set of nine diverse enzyme active sites. For each enzyme, the theozyme for the rate-determining transition state plus the catalytic groups modeled by side-chain mimics was optimized using B3LYP/6-31G(d) or, in one case, HF/3-21G(d) quantum mechanical calculations. To determine if the theozyme can reproduce the natural evolutionary catalytic geometry, the positions of optimized catalytic atoms, i.e., covalent, partial covalent, or stabilizing interactions with transition state atoms, are compared to the positions of the atoms in the X-ray crystal structure with a bound inhibitor. These structure comparisons are contrasted to computed substrate-active site structures surrounded by the same theozyme residues. The theozyme/transition structure is shown to predict geometries of active sites with an average RMSD of 0.64 A from the crystal structure, while the RMSD for the bound intermediate complexes are significantly higher at 1.42 A. The implications for computational enzyme design are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Cristalografía por Rayos X , Enzimas/metabolismo , Modelos Teóricos , Teoría Cuántica , Animales , Bacillus/enzimología , Sitios de Unión , Catálisis , Bovinos , Escherichia coli/enzimología , Humanos , Enlace de Hidrógeno , Modelos Químicos , Unión Proteica , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Pseudomonas/enzimología , Especificidad por Sustrato
5.
J Org Chem ; 73(3): 889-99, 2008 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18179229

RESUMEN

The design of active sites has been carried out using quantum mechanical calculations to predict the rate-determining transition state of a desired reaction in presence of the optimal arrangement of catalytic functional groups (theozyme). Eleven versatile reaction targets were chosen, including hydrolysis, dehydration, isomerization, aldol, and Diels-Alder reactions. For each of the targets, the predicted mechanism and the rate-determining transition state (TS) of the uncatalyzed reaction in water is presented. For the rate-determining TS, a catalytic site was designed using naturalistic catalytic units followed by an estimation of the rate acceleration provided by a reoptimization of the catalytic site. Finally, the geometries of the sites were compared to the X-ray structures of related natural enzymes. Recent advances in computational algorithms and power, coupled with successes in computational protein design, have provided a powerful context for undertaking such an endeavor. We propose that theozymes are excellent candidates to serve as the active site models for design processes.


Asunto(s)
Enzimas/química , Enzimas/metabolismo , Acroleína/química , Aldehídos/química , Sitios de Unión , Catálisis , Cocaína/química , Cocaína/metabolismo , Activación Enzimática , Hidrólisis , Isomerismo , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Molecular , Naftoles/química , Nitrofenoles/química , Nitrofenoles/metabolismo , Péptidos/química , Prolina/química , Teoría Cuántica , Sarín/química , Sarín/metabolismo , Especificidad por Sustrato , Agua/química
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