Underlying Role of Hydrophobic Environments in Tuning Metal Elements for Efficient Enzyme Catalysis

Hyunuk Eom, Yuanxin Cao, Hyunsook Kim, Samuel P. De Visser, Woon Ju Song

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Abstract

The catalytic functions of metalloenzymes are often strongly correlated with metal elements in the active sites. However, dioxygen-activating nonheme quercetin dioxygenases (QueD) are found with various first-row transition metal ions when metal swapping inactivates their innate catalytic activity. To unveil the molecular basis of this seemingly promiscuous yet metal-specific enzyme, we transformed manganese-dependent QueD into a nickel-dependent enzyme by sequence- and structure-based directed evolution. Although the net effect of acquired mutations was primarily to rearrange hydrophobic residues in the active site pocket, biochemical, kinetic, X-ray crystallographic, spectroscopic, and computational studies suggest that these modifications in the secondary coordination spheres can adjust the electronic structure of the enzyme-sub-strate complex to counteract the effects induced by the metal substitution. These results explicitly demonstrate that such noncovalent interactions encrypt metal specificity in a finely modulated manner, revealing the underestimated chemical power of the hydrophobic sequence network in enzyme catalysis.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5880–5887
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume141
Issue number10
Early online date28 Feb 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2023

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