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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 4 papers out of 4 papers

Cyclobutanone Inhibitor of Cobalt-Functionalized Metallo-γ-Lactonase AiiA with Cyclobutanone Ring Opening in the Active Site.

  • Cory T Reidl‎ et al.
  • ACS omega‎
  • 2021‎

An α-amido cyclobutanone possessing a C10 hydrocarbon tail was designed as a potential transition-state mimetic for the quorum-quenching metallo-γ-lactonase autoinducer inactivator A (AiiA) with the support of in-house modeling techniques and found to be a competitive inhibitor of dicobalt(II) AiiA with an inhibition constant of K i = 0.007 ± 0.002 mM. The catalytic mechanism of AiiA was further explored using our product-based transition-state modeling (PBTSM) computational approach, providing substrate-intermediate models arising during enzyme turnover and further insight into substrate-enzyme interactions governing native substrate catalysis. These interactions were targeted in the docking of cyclobutanone hydrates into the active site of AiiA. The X-ray crystal structure of dicobalt(II) AiiA cocrystallized with this cyclobutanone inhibitor unexpectedly revealed an N-(2-oxocyclobutyl)decanamide ring-opened acyclic product bound to the enzyme active site (PDB 7L5F). The C10 alkyl chain and its interaction with the hydrophobic phenylalanine clamp region of AiiA adjacent to the active site enabled atomic placement of the ligand atoms, including the C10 alkyl chain. A mechanistic hypothesis for the ring opening is proposed involving a radical-mediated process.


Disease-causing cystathionine β-synthase linker mutations impair allosteric regulation.

  • Joseph V Roman‎ et al.
  • The Journal of biological chemistry‎
  • 2023‎

Cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) catalyzes the committing step in the transsulfuration pathway, which is important for clearing homocysteine and furnishing cysteine. The transsulfuration pathway also generates H2S, a signaling molecule. CBS is a modular protein with a heme and pyridoxal phosphate-binding catalytic core, which is separated by a linker region from the C-terminal regulatory domain that binds S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet), an allosteric activator. Recent cryo-EM structures reveal that CBS exists in a fibrillar form and undergoes a dramatic architectural rearrangement between the basal and AdoMet-bound states. CBS is the single most common locus of mutations associated with homocystinuria, and, in this study, we have characterized three clinical variants (K384E/N and M391I), which reside in the linker region. The native fibrillar form is destabilized in the variants, and differences in their limited proteolytic fingerprints also reveal conformational alterations. The crystal structure of the truncated K384N variant, lacking the regulatory domain, reveals that the overall fold of the catalytic core is unperturbed. M391I CBS exhibits a modest (1.4-fold) decrease while the K384E/N variants exhibit a significant (∼8-fold) decrease in basal activity, which is either unresponsive to or inhibited by AdoMet. Pre-steady state kinetic analyses reveal that the K384E/N substitutions exhibit pleiotropic effects and that the differences between them are expressed in the second half reaction, that is, homocysteine binding and reaction with the aminoacrylate intermediate. Together, these studies point to an important role for the linker in stabilizing the higher-order oligomeric structure of CBS and enabling AdoMet-dependent regulation.


Architecture of the human G-protein-methylmalonyl-CoA mutase nanoassembly for B12 delivery and repair.

  • Romila Mascarenhas‎ et al.
  • Nature communications‎
  • 2023‎

G-proteins function as molecular switches to power cofactor translocation and confer fidelity in metal trafficking. The G-protein, MMAA, together with MMAB, an adenosyltransferase, orchestrate cofactor delivery and repair of B12-dependent human methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MMUT). The mechanism by which the complex assembles and moves a >1300 Da cargo, or fails in disease, are poorly understood. Herein, we report the crystal structure of the human MMUT-MMAA nano-assembly, which reveals a dramatic 180° rotation of the B12 domain, exposing it to solvent. The complex, stabilized by MMAA wedging between two MMUT domains, leads to ordering of the switch I and III loops, revealing the molecular basis of mutase-dependent GTPase activation. The structure explains the biochemical penalties incurred by methylmalonic aciduria-causing mutations that reside at the MMAA-MMUT interfaces we identify here.


Bivalent molecular mimicry by ADP protects metal redox state and promotes coenzyme B12 repair.

  • Harsha Gouda‎ et al.
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America‎
  • 2023‎

Control over transition metal redox state is essential for metalloprotein function and can be achieved via coordination chemistry and/or sequestration from bulk solvent. Human methylmalonyl-Coenzyme A (CoA) mutase (MCM) catalyzes the isomerization of methylmalonyl-CoA to succinyl-CoA using 5'-deoxyadenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) as a metallocofactor. During catalysis, the occasional escape of the 5'-deoxyadenosine (dAdo) moiety leaves the cob(II)alamin intermediate stranded and prone to hyperoxidation to hydroxocobalamin, which is recalcitrant to repair. In this study, we have identified the use of bivalent molecular mimicry by ADP, coopting the 5'-deoxyadenosine and diphosphate moieties in the cofactor and substrate, respectively, to protect against cob(II)alamin overoxidation on MCM. Crystallographic and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) data reveal that ADP exerts control over the metal oxidation state by inducing a conformational change that seals off solvent access, rather than by switching five-coordinate cob(II)alamin to the more air stable four-coordinate state. Subsequent binding of methylmalonyl-CoA (or CoA) promotes cob(II)alamin off-loading from MCM to adenosyltransferase for repair. This study identifies an unconventional strategy for controlling metal redox state by an abundant metabolite to plug active site access, which is key to preserving and recycling a rare, but essential, metal cofactor.


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