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Capture of activated dioxygen intermediates at the copper-active site of a lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase
Authors:Gabriela C. Schrö  der,William B. O'Dell,Simon P. Webb,Pratul K. Agarwal,Flora Meilleur
Affiliation:Department of Molecular and Structural Biochemistry, North Carolina State University, Raleigh NC 27695 USA.; Neutron Scattering Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge TN 37831 USA ; VeraChem LLC, 12850 Middlebrook Rd. Ste 205, Germantown MD 20874-5244 USA ; Department of Physiological Sciences and High-Performance Computing Center, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater OK 74078 USA,
Abstract:Metalloproteins perform a diverse array of redox-related reactions facilitated by the increased chemical functionality afforded by their metallocofactors. Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are a class of copper-dependent enzymes that are responsible for the breakdown of recalcitrant polysaccharides via oxidative cleavage at the glycosidic bond. The activated copper-oxygen intermediates and their mechanism of formation remains to be established. Neutron protein crystallography which permits direct visualization of protonation states was used to investigate the initial steps of oxygen activation directly following active site copper reduction in Neurospora crassa LPMO9D. Herein, we cryo-trap an activated dioxygen intermediate in a mixture of superoxo and hydroperoxo states, and we identify the conserved second coordination shell residue His157 as the proton donor. Density functional theory calculations indicate that both superoxo and hydroperoxo active site states are stable. The hydroperoxo formed is potentially an early LPMO catalytic reaction intermediate or the first step in the mechanism of hydrogen peroxide formation in the absence of substrate. We observe that the N-terminal amino group of the copper coordinating His1 remains doubly protonated directly following molecular oxygen reduction by copper. Aided by molecular dynamics and mining minima free energy calculations we establish that the conserved second-shell His161 in MtPMO3* displays conformational flexibility in solution and that this flexibility is also observed, though to a lesser extent, in His157 of NcLPMO9D. The imidazolate form of His157 observed in our structure following oxygen intermediate protonation can be attributed to abolished His157 flexibility due steric hindrance in the crystal as well as the solvent-occluded active site environment due to crystal packing. A neutron crystal structure of NcLPMO9D at low pH further supports occlusion of the active site since His157 remains singly protonated even at acidic conditions.

Superoxo and hydroperoxo intermediates were cryotrapped at the copper active site of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenase using neutron protein crystallography.
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