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1.
The active-site dynamics of arginine deiminase (ADI) complexed with the arginine substrate are investigated with ns molecular dynamics for the wildtype ADI and several mutants. It is shown that the substrate is held in the active site by an extensive hydrogen bond network, which may be weakened by substitution of active-site residues. In addition, the initial step of the catalysis is explored in several truncated active-site models with density functional theory. Evidence is presented in support of the hypothesis that the nucleophilic attack of the ADI Cys thiol at the guanidino carbon of the substrate is initiated by substrate-mediated proton transfer to a His residue in the catalytic triad (Cys-His-Glu). In addition, the active-site residues are found to strongly influence the reaction profile, consistent with their important role in catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
The role of Asp102 in the catalytic relay system of serine proteases is studied theoretically by calculating the free energy profiles of the single proton-transfer reaction by the Asn102 mutant trypsin and the concerted double proton-transfer reaction (so-called the charge-relay mechanism) of the wild-type trypsin. For each reaction, the reaction free energy profile of the rate-determining step (the tetrahedral intermediate formation step) is calculated by using ab initio QM/MM electronic structure calculations combined with molecular dynamics-free energy perturbation method. In the mutant reaction, the free energy monotonically increases along the reaction path. The rate-determining step of the mutant reaction is the formation of tetrahedral intermediate complex, not the base (His57) abstraction of the proton from Ser195. In contrast to the single proton-transfer reaction of the wild-type, MD simulations of the enzyme-substrate complex show that the catalytically favorable alignment of the relay system (the hydrogen bonding network between the mutant triad, His57, Asn102, and Ser195) is rarely observed even in the presence of a substrate at the active site. In the double proton-transfer reaction, the energy barrier is observed at the proton abstraction step, which corresponds to the rate-determining step of the single proton-transfer reaction of the wild-type. Although both reaction profiles show an increase of the activation barrier by several kcals/mol, these increases have different energetic origins: a large energetic loss of the electrostatic stabilization between His57 and Asn102 in the mutant reaction, while the lack of stabilization by the protein environment in the double proton-transfer reaction. Comparing the present results with the single proton transfer of the wild-type, Asp102 is proven to play two important roles in the catalytic process. One is to stabilize the protonated His57, or ionic intermediate, formed during the acylation, and the other is to fix the configuration around the active site, which is favorable to promote the catalytic process. These two factors are closely related to each other and are indispensable for the efficient catalysis. Also the present calculations suggest the importance of the remote site interaction between His57 and Val213-Ser214 at the catalytic transition state.  相似文献   

3.
The reaction mechanism of serine proteases (trypsin), which catalyze peptide hydrolysis, is studied theoretically by ab initio QM/MM electronic structure calculations combined with Molecular Dynamics-Free Energy Perturbation calculations. We have calculated the entire reaction free energy profiles of the first reaction step of this enzyme (acylation process). The present calculations show that the rate-determining step of the acylation is the formation of the tetrahedral intermediate, and the breakdown of this intermediate has a small energy barrier. The calculated activation free energy for the acylation is approximately 17.8 kcal/mol at QM/MM MP2/(aug)-cc-pVDZ//HF/6-31(+)G/AMBER level, and this reaction is an exothermic process. MD simulations of the enzyme-substrate (ES) complex and the free enzyme in aqueous phase show that the substrate binding induces slight conformational changes around the active site, which favor the alignment of the reactive fragments (His57, Asp102, and Ser195) together in a reactive orientation. It is also shown that the proton transfer from Ser195 to His57 and the nucleophilic attack of Ser195 to the carbonyl carbon of the scissile bond of the substrate occur in a concerted manner. In this reaction, protein environment plays a crucial role to lowering the activation free energy by stabilizing the tetrahedral intermediate compared to the ES complex. The polarization energy calculations show that the enzyme active site is in a very polar environment because of the polar main chain contributions of protein. Also, the ground-state destabilization effect (steric strain) is not a major catalytic factor. The most important catalytic factor of stabilizing the tetrahedral intermediate is the electrostatic interaction between the active site and particular regions of protein: the main chain NH groups in Gly193 and Ser195 (so-called oxyanion hole region) stabilize negative charge generated on the carbonyl oxygen of the scissile bond, and the main chain carbonyl groups in Ile212 approximately Ser214 stabilize a positive charge generated on the imidazole ring of His57.  相似文献   

4.
In the present DFT study, the catalytic mechanism of H2O2 formation in the oxidative half-reaction of NiSOD, E-Ni(II) + O2- + 2H+ --> E-Ni(III) + H2O2, has been investigated. The main objective of this study is to investigate the source of two protons required in this half-reaction. The proposed mechanism consists of two steps: superoxide coordination and H2O2 formation. The effect of protonation of Cys6 and the proton donating roles of side chains (S) and backbones (B) of His1, Asp3, Cys6, and Tyr9 residues in these two steps have been studied in detail. For protonated Cys6, superoxide binding generates a Ni(III)-O2H species in a process that is exothermic by 17.4 kcal/mol (in protein environment using the continuum model). From the Ni(III)-O2H species, H2O2 formation occurs through a proton donation by His1 via Tyr9, which relative to the resting position of the enzyme is exothermic by 4.9 kcal/mol. In this pathway, a proton donating role of His1 residue is proposed. However, for unprotonated Cys6, a Ni(II)-O2- species is generated in a process that is exothermic by 11.3 kcal/mol. From the Ni(II)-O2- species, the only feasible pathway for H2O2 formation is through donation of protons by the Tyr9(S)-Asp3(S) pair. The results discussed in this study elucidate the role of the active site residues in the catalytic cycle and provide intricate details of the complex functioning of this enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
The catalytic mechanism of Mus musculus adenosine deaminase (ADA) has been studied by quantum mechanics and two‐layered ONIOM calculations. Our calculations show that the previously proposed mechanism, involving His238 as the general base to activate the Zn‐bound water, has a high activation barrier of about 28 kcal/mol at the proposed rate‐determining nucleophilic addition step, and the corresponding calculated kinetic isotope effects are significantly different from the recent experimental observations. We propose a revised mechanism based on calculations, in which Glu217 serves as the general base to abstract the proton of the Zn‐bound water, and the protonated Glu217 then activates the substrate for the subsequent nucleophilic addition. The rate‐determining step is the proton transfer from Zn‐OH to 6‐NH2 of the tetrahedral intermediate, in which His238 serves as a proton shuttle for the proton transfer. The calculated kinetic isotope effects agree well with the experimental data, and calculated activation energy is also consistent with the experimental reaction rate. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2010  相似文献   

6.
Histidine phosphatases are a class of enzymes that are characterized by the presence of a conserved RHGXRXP motif. This motif contains a catalytic histidine that is being phosphorylated in the course of a dephosphorylation reaction catalyzed by these enzymes. Prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP) is one such enzyme. The dephosphorylation of phosphotyrosine by PAP is a two-step process. The first step involves the transfer of a phosphate group from the substrate to the histidine (His12). The present study reports on the details of the first step of this reaction, which was investigated using a series of quantum chemistry calculations. A number of quantum models were constructed containing various residues that were thought to play a role in the mechanism. In all these models, the transition state displayed an associative character. The transition state is stabilized by three active site arginines (Arg11, Arg15, and Arg79), two of which belong to the aforementioned conserved motif. The work also demonstrated that His12 could act as a nucleophile. The enzyme is further characterized by a His257-Asp258 motif. The role of Asp258 has been elusive. In this work, we propose that Asp258 acts as a proton donor which becomes protonated when the substrate enters the binding pocket. Evidence is also obtained that the transfer of a proton from Asp258 to the leaving group is possibly mediated by a water molecule in the active site. The work also underlines the importance of His257 in lowering the energy barrier for the nucleophilic attack.  相似文献   

7.
8.
In this work, we have investigated the binding conformations of the substrate in the active site of 5-HIU hydrolase kpHIUH and its catalytic hydrolysis mechanism. Docking calculations revealed that the substrate adopts a conformation in the active site with its molecular plane laying parallel to the binding interface of the protein dimer of kpHIUH, in which His7 and His92 are located adjacent to the hydrolysis site C6 and have hydrogen bond interactions with the lytic water. Based on this binding conformation, density functional theory calculations indicated that the optimal catalytic mechanism consists of two stages: (1) the lytic water molecule is deprotonated by His92 and carries out nucleophilic attack on C6=O of 5-HIU, resulting in an oxyanion intermediate; (2) by accepting a proton transferred from His92, C6–N5 bond is cleaved to completes the catalytic cycle. The roles of His7, His92, Ser108 and Arg49 in the catalytic reaction were revealed and discussed in detail.  相似文献   

9.
General‐base catalysis in serine proteases still poses mechanistic challenges despite decades of research. Whether proton transfer from the catalytic Ser to His and nucleophilic attack on the substrate are concerted or stepwise is still under debate, even for the classical Asp‐His‐Ser catalytic triad. To address these key catalytic steps, the transformation of the Michaelis complex to tetrahedral complex in the covalent inhibition of two prototype serine proteases was studied: chymotrypsin (with the catalytic triad) inhibition by a peptidyl trifluoromethane and GlpG rhomboid (with Ser‐His dyad) inhibition by an isocoumarin derivative. The sampled MD trajectories of averaged pKa values of catalytic residues were QM calculated by the MD‐QM/SCRF(VS) method on molecular clusters simulating the active site. Differences between concerted and stepwise mechanisms are controlled by the dynamically changing pKa values of the catalytic residues as a function of their progressively reduced water exposure, caused by the incoming ligand.  相似文献   

10.
The catalytic mechanism of Bacillus subtilis guanine deaminase (bGD), a Zn metalloenzyme, has been investigated by a combination of quantum mechanical calculations using the multilayered ONIOM method and molecular dynamics simulations. In contrast to a previously proposed catalytic mechanism, which requires the bound guanine to assume a rare tautomeric state, the ONIOM calculations showed that the active-site residues of the enzyme do not affect the tautomeric state of guanine, and consequently the bound guanine is a tautomer that is the most abundant in aqueous solution. Two residues, Glutamate 55 and Aspartate 114, were found to play important roles in proton shuttling in the reaction. The proposed reaction path is initiated by proton transfer from a Zn-bound water to protonate Asp114. This process may be quite complex and rather dynamic in nature, as revealed by the molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, whereby another water may bridge the Zn-bound water and Asp114, which then is eliminated by positioning of guanine in the active site. The binding of guanine stabilizes protonated Asp114 by hydrogen bond formation. Asp114 can then transfer its proton to the N3 of the bound guanine, facilitating the nucleophilic attack on C2 of the guanine by the Zn-bound hydroxide to form a tetrahedral intermediate. This occurs with a rather low barrier. Glu55 then transfers a proton from the Zn-hydroxide to the amino group of the reaction intermediate and, at this point, the C2-N2 bond has lengthened by 0.2 A compared to guanine, making C2-N2 bond cleavage more facile. The C2-N2 bond breaks forming ammonia, with an energy barrier of approximately 8.8 kcal/mol. Ammonia leaves the active site, and xanthine is freed by the cleavage of the Zn-O2 bond, with a barrier approximately 8.4 kcal/mol. Along this reaction path, the highest barrier comes from C2-N2 bond cleavage, while the barrier from the cleavage of the Zn-O2 bond is slightly smaller. The Zn-O2 bond can be broken without the assistance of water during the release of xanthine.  相似文献   

11.
The deacylation step of serine protease catalysis is studied using DFT and ab initio QM/MM calculations combined with MD/umbrella sampling calculations. Free energies of the entire reaction are calculated in the gas phase, in a continuum solvent, and in the enzyme elastase. The calculations show that a concerted mechanism in the gas phase is replaced by a stepwise mechanism when solvent effects or an acetate ion are added to the reference system, with the tetrahedral intermediate being a shallow minimum on the free energy surface. In the enzyme, the tetrahedral intermediate is a relatively stable species ( approximately 7 kcal/mol lower in energy than the transition state), mainly due to the electrostatic effects of the oxyanion hole and Asp102. It is formed in the first step of the reaction, as a result of a proton transfer from the nucleophilic water to His57 and of an attack of the remaining hydroxyl on the ester carbonyl. This is the rate-determining step of the reaction, which requires approximately 22 kcal/mol for activation, approximately 5 kcal/mol less than the reference reaction in water. In the second stage of the reaction, only small energy barriers are detected to facilitate the proton transfer from His57 to Ser195 and the breakdown of the tetrahedral intermediate. Those are attributed mainly to a movement of Ser195 and to a rotation of the His57 side chain. During the rotation, the imidazolium ion is stabilized by a strong H-bond with Asp102, and the C(epsilon)(1)-H...O H-bond with Ser214 is replaced by one with Thr213, suggesting that a "ring-flip mechanism" is not necessary as a driving force for the reaction. The movements of His57 and Ser195 are highly correlated with rearrangements of the binding site, suggesting that product release may be implicated in the deacylation process.  相似文献   

12.
Hybrid Car-Parrinello QM/MM calculations are used to investigate the reaction mechanism of hydrolysis of a common beta-lactam substrate (cefotaxime) by the monozinc beta-lactamase from Bacillus cereus (BcII). The calculations suggest a fundamental role for an active site water in the catalytic mechanism. This water molecule binds the zinc ion in the first step of the reaction, expanding the zinc coordination number and providing a proton donor adequately oriented for the second step. The free energy barriers of the two reaction steps are similar and consistent with the available experimental data. The conserved hydrogen bond network in the active site, defined by Asp120, Cys221, and His263, not only contributes to orient the nucleophile (as already proposed), but it also guides the second catalytic water molecule to the zinc ion after the substrate is bound. The hydrolysis reaction in water has a relatively high free energy barrier, which is consistent with the stability of cefotaxime in water solution. The modeled Michaelis complexes for other substrates are also characterized by the presence of an ordered water molecule in the same position, suggesting that this mechanism might be general for the hydrolysis of different beta-lactam substrates.  相似文献   

13.
Molecular dynamics simulations using a combined QM/MM potential have been performed to study the catalytic mechanism of human cathepsin K, a member of the papain family of cysteine proteases. We have determined the two-dimensional free energy surfaces of both acylation and deacylation steps to characterize the reaction mechanism. These free energy profiles show that the acylation step is rate limiting with a barrier height of 19.8 kcal/mol in human cathepsin K and of 29.3 kcal/mol in aqueous solution. The free energy of activation for the deacylation step is 16.7 kcal/mol in cathepsin K and 17.8 kcal/mol in aqueous solution. The reduction of free energy barrier is achieved by stabilization of the oxyanion in the transition state. Interestingly, although the "oxyanion hole" has been formed in the Michaelis complex, the amide units do not donate hydrogen bonds directly to the carbonyl oxygen of the substrate, but they stabilize the thiolate anion nucleophile. Hydrogen-bonding interactions are induced as the substrate amide group approaches the nucleophile, moving more than 2 A and placing the oxyanion in contact with Gln19 and the backbone amide of Cys25. The hydrolysis of peptide substrate shares a common mechanism both for the catalyzed reaction in human cathepsin K and for the uncatalyzed reaction in water. Overall, the nucleophilic attack by Cys25 thiolate and the proton-transfer reaction from His162 to the amide nitrogen are highly coupled, whereas a tetrahedral intermediate is formed along the nucleophilic reaction pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Protein kinases are important enzymes controlling the majority of cellular signaling events via a transfer of the gamma-phosphate of ATP to a target protein. Even after many years of study, the mechanism of this reaction is still poorly understood. Among many factors that may be responsible for the 1011-fold rate enhancement due to this enzyme, the role of the conserved aspartate (Asp166) has been given special consideration. While the essential presence of Asp166 has been established by mutational studies, its function is still debated. The general base catalyst role assigned to Asp166 on the basis of its position in the active site has been brought into question by the pH dependence of the reaction rate, isotope measurements, and pre-steady-state kinetics. Recent semiempirical calculations have added to the controversy surrounding the role of Asp166 in the catalytic mechanism. No major role for Asp166 has been found in these calculations, which have predicted the reaction process consisting of an early transfer of a substrate proton onto the phosphate group. These conclusions were inconsistent with experimental observations. To address these differences between experimental results and theory with a more reliable computational approach and to provide a theoretical platform for understanding catalysis in this important enzyme family, we have carried out first-principles structural and dynamical calculations of the reaction process in cAPK kinase. To preserve the essential features of the reaction, representations of all of the key conserved residues (82 atoms) were included in the calculation. The structural calculations were performed using the local basis density functional (DFT) approach with both hybrid B3LYP and PBE96 generalized gradient approximations. This kind of calculation has been shown to yield highly accurate structural information for a large number of systems. The optimized reactant state structure is in good agreement with X-ray data. In contrast to semiempirical methods, the lowest energy product state places the substrate proton on Asp166. First-principles molecular dynamics simulations provide additional support for the stability of this product state. The latter also demonstrate that the proton transfer to Asp166 occurs at a point in the reaction where bond cleavage at the PO bridging position is already advanced. This mechanism is further supported by the calculated structure of the transition state in which the substrate hydroxyl group is largely intact. A metaphoshate-like structure is present in the transition state, which is consistent with the X-ray structures of transition state mimics. On the basis of the calculated structure of the transition state, it is estimated to be 85% dissociative. Our analysis also indicates an increase in the hydrogen bond strength between Asp166 and substrate hydroxyl and a small decrease in the bond strength of the latter in the transition state. In summary, our calculations demonstrate the importance of Asp166 in the enzymatic mechanism as a proton acceptor. However, the proton abstraction from the substrate occurs late in the reaction process. Thus, in the catalytic mechanism of cAPK protein kinase, Asp166 plays a role of a "proton trap" that locks the transferred phosphoryl group to the substrate. These results resolve prior inconsistencies between theory and experiment and bring new understanding of the role of Asp166 in the protein kinase catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
The biological dehalogenation of fluoroacetate carried out by fluoroacetate dehalogenase is discussed by using quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations for a whole‐enzyme model of 10 800 atoms. Substrate fluoroacetate is anchored by a hydrogen‐bonding network with water molecules and the surrounding amino acid residues of Arg105, Arg108, His149, Trp150, and Tyr212 in the active site in a similar way to haloalkane dehalogenase. Asp104 is likely to act as a nucleophile to attack the α‐carbon of fluoroacetate, resulting in the formation of an ester intermediate, which is subsequently hydrolyzed by the nucleophilic attack of a water molecule to the carbonyl carbon atom. The cleavage of the strong C? F bond is greatly facilitated by the hydrogen‐bonding interactions between the leaving fluorine atom and the three amino acid residues of His149, Trp150, and Tyr212. The hydrolysis of the ester intermediate is initiated by a proton transfer from the water molecule to His271 and by the simultaneous nucleophilic attack of the water molecule. The transition state and produced tetrahedral intermediate are stabilized by Asp128 and the oxyanion hole composed of Phe34 and Arg105.  相似文献   

16.
A series of mutations was targeted at the methionine residue, Met471, coordinating the Cu(M) site of tyramine beta-monooxygenase (TbetaM). The methionine ligand at Cu(M) is believed to be key to dioxygen activation and the hydroxylation chemistry of the copper monooxygenases. The reactivity and copper binding properties of three TbetaM mutants, Met471Asp, Met471Cys, and Met471His, were examined. All three mutants show similar metal binding affinities to wild type TbetaM in the oxidized enzyme forms. EPR spectroscopy suggests that the Cu(II) coordination geometry is identical to that of the WT enzyme. However, substrate hydroxylation was observed for the reaction of tyramine solely with Met471Cys TbetaM. Met471Cys TbetaM provides the first example of an active mutant directed at the Cu(M) site of this class of hydroxylases. The reactivity and altered kinetics of the Met471Cys mutant further highlight the central role of the methionine residue in the enzyme mechanism. The sole ability of the cysteine residue to support activity among the series of alternate amino acids investigated is relevant to theoretical and biomimetic investigations of dioxygen activation at mononuclear copper centers.  相似文献   

17.
Density functional calculations are employed to explore the mechanisms of all elementary reaction steps involved in the catalytic cycle of pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC). Different models are constructed for mimicking the involvement of some key residues in a certain step. The effect of the protein framework on the potential energy profiles of active site models is approximately modeled by fixing some freedoms, based on the crystal structure of the PDC enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ScPDC). Our calculations confirm that Glu51 is the most important residue in the formation of the ylide and the release of acetaldehyde via the proton relay between Glu51, N1', and the 4'-amino group of thiamine diphosphate. The presence of Glu477 and Asp28 residues makes the decarboxylation of lactylthiamin diphosphate (LThDP) an endothermic process with a significant free energy barrier. The protonation of the alpha-carbanion to form 2-(1-hydroxyethyl)-thiamin diphosphate is found to go through a concerted double proton transfer transition state involving both Asp28 and His115 residues. The final step, acetaldehyde release, is likely to proceed through a concerted transition state involving carbon-carbon bond-breaking and the deprotonation of the alpha-hydroxyl group. The decarboxylation of LThDP and the protonation of the alpha-carbanion are two rate-limiting steps, relative to the facile occurrence of the ylide formation and acetaldehyde release. The catalytic roles of residues Glu51, Glu477, Asp28, and Gly417 in the active site of ScPDC in individual steps elucidated from the present study are in good agreement with those derived from site-directed mutagenesis.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrilase 2 (Nit2) is a representative member of the nitrilase superfamily that catalyzes the hydrolysis of α-ketosuccinamate into oxaloacetate. It has been associated with the metabolism of rapidly dividing cells like cancer cells. The catalytic mechanism of Nit2 employs a catalytic triad formed by Cys191, Glu81 and Lys150. The Cys191 and Glu81 play an active role during the catalytic process while the Lys150 is shown to play only a secondary role. The results demonstrate that the catalytic mechanism of Nit2 involves four steps. The nucleophilic attack of Cys191 to the α-ketosuccinamate, the formation of two tetrahedral enzyme adducts and the hydrolysis of a thioacyl-enzyme intermediate, from which results the formation of oxaloacetate and enzymatic turnover. The rate limiting step of the catalytic process is the formation of the first tetrahedral intermediate with a calculated activation free energy of 18.4 kcal/mol, which agrees very well with the experimental kcat (17.67 kcal/mol).  相似文献   

19.
α‐Methylacyl‐CoA racemases (AMACR) are essential enzymes for branched‐chain lipids and drugs metabolism. AMACR catalyzes the chiral inversion of (2R) and (2S)‐methylacyl‐CoA esters in both directions. In this study, we investigated the catalytic mechanism of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MCR) α‐methylacyl‐CoA racemase by using the density functional theory with the hybrid functional B3LYP. Our calculations elucidate and support the mechanism proposed by Prasenjit Bhaumik. His126 and Asp156 serve as the acid/base‐pair residues in the 1,1‐proton transfer catalytic reaction. From the optimized structures, it can be seen that an enolate intermediate is formed and the possibility of forming a ketene or a carbanion intermediate is excluded. By comparing the energy barriers, we could consider that the deprotonation step is the rate‐determined step in the invert direction from (S)‐ to (R)‐enantiomer. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2012  相似文献   

20.
We present results from ab initio and density functional theory studies of the mechanism for serine hydrolase catalyzed ester hydrolysis. A model system containing both the catalytic triad and the oxyanion hole was studied. The catalytic triad was represented by formate anion, imidazole, and methanol. The oxyanion hole was represented by two water molecules. Methyl formate was used as the substrate. In the acylation step, our computations show that the cooperation of the Asp group and oxyanion hydrogen bonds is capable of lowering the activation barrier by about 15 kcal/mol. The transition state leading to the first tetrahedral intermediate in the acylation step is rate limiting with an activation barrier (ΔE0) of 13.4 kcal/mol. The activation barrier in the deacylation step is smaller. The double-proton-transfer mechanism is energetically unfavorable by about 2 kcal/mol. The bonds between the Asp group and the His group, and the hydrogen bonds in the oxyanion hole, increase in strength going from the Michaelis complex toward the transition state and the tetrahedral intermediate. In the acylation step, the tetrahedral intermediate is a very shallow minimum on the energy surface and is not viable when molecular vibrations are included. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Quant Chem 69: 89–103, 1998  相似文献   

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