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The Soybean Lipoxygenase-Substrate Complex: Correlation between the Properties of Tunneling-Ready States and ENDOR-Detected Structures of Ground States.
Offenbacher, Adam R; Sharma, Ajay; Doan, Peter E; Klinman, Judith P; Hoffman, Brian M.
  • Offenbacher AR; Department of Chemistry , East Carolina University , Greenville , North Carolina 27858 , United States.
  • Sharma A; Department of Chemistry and California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3) , University of California , Berkeley , California 94720 , United States.
  • Doan PE; Department of Chemistry , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
  • Klinman JP; Department of Chemistry , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
  • Hoffman BM; Department of Chemistry and California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3) , University of California , Berkeley , California 94720 , United States.
Biochemistry ; 59(7): 901-910, 2020 02 25.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32022556
Hydrogen tunneling in enzymatic C-H activation requires a dynamical sampling among ground-state enzyme-substrate (E-S) conformations, which transiently generates a tunneling-ready state (TRS). The TRS is characterized by a hydrogen donor-acceptor distance (DAD) of 2.7 Å, ∼0.5 Å shorter than the dominant DAD of optimized ground states. Recently, a high-resolution, 13C electron-nuclear double-resonance (ENDOR) approach was developed to characterize the ground-state structure of the complex of the linoleic acid (LA) substrate with soybean lipoxygenase (SLO). The resulting enzyme-substrate model revealed two ground-state conformers with different distances between the target C11 of LA and the catalytically active cofactor [Fe(III)-OH]: the active conformer "a", with a van der Waals DAD of 3.1 Å between C11 and metal-bound hydroxide, and an inactive conformer "b", with a distance that is almost 1 Å longer. Herein, the structure of the E-S complex is examined for a series of six variants in which subtle structural modifications of SLO have been introduced either at a hydrophobic side chain near the bound substrate or at a remote residue within a protein network whose flexibility influences hydrogen transfer. A remarkable correlation is found between the ENDOR-derived population of the active ground-state conformer a and the kinetically derived differential enthalpic barrier for D versus H transfer, ΔEa, with the latter increasing as the fraction of conformer a decreases. As proposed, ΔEa provides a "ruler" for the DAD within the TRS. ENDOR measurements further corroborate the previous identification of a dynamical network coupling the buried active site of SLO to the surface. This study shows that subtle imperfections within the initial ground-state structures of E-S complexes are accompanied by compromised geometries at the TRS.
Asunto(s)

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Glycine max / Lipooxigenasa / Ácido Linoleico Idioma: En Año: 2020 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Glycine max / Lipooxigenasa / Ácido Linoleico Idioma: En Año: 2020 Tipo del documento: Article