4.8 Article

A Paradigm Shift in the Catalytic Cycle of P450: The Preparatory Choreography during O2 Binding and Origins of the Necessity for Two Protonation Pathways

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 10, Issue 19, Pages 11481-11492

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.0c02775

Keywords

CYP450; catalytic cycle; O-2 efflux; protonation; MD simulations; QM/MM calculations

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation [BT/RLS/Re-entry/10/2017]
  2. [520/18]

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The study uses MD simulations and QM/MM calculations to address the preparatory half of the catalytic cycle for two cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes, CYP450(CAM) and CYP450(BM3). We focus on two unexplored/gray events: (a) the O-2 entrance and binding to form the oxyferrous species as a function of the O-2 concentration/pressure and (b) the protonation steps that eventually lead to the formation of the ultimate active species, compound I (cf. 7). Two fundamental and paradigm-shifting findings emerge: (a) the O-2 concentration/pressure required for O-2 binding must be neither high nor low. The binding is ushered by substrate choreography, which is guided by the moderate O-2 pressure and strategic protein residues (Arg112 and Phe87) that block the substrate approach to the heme, thus enabling O-2 accumulation near iron. (b) The formation of water channels, which elicit that the protonation steps are different for 5 -> 6 and 6 -> 7. The process 5. 6, generating the ferric hydroperoxide, occurs via the channels that are formed by breakage of the salt bridges holding the propionate side chains of the porphyrin, while the formation of compound I, 6 -> 7, transpires via the traditional acid-alcohol pairs (Asp251/Thr252 in CAM; Glu267/Thr268 in BM3). The location of acidic ammonium groups (Lys69 in CYP450(BM3) and Arg299 in CYP450(CAM)) near the propionate side chains is generally conserved in the CYP450 family. Therefore, our study highlights the evolutionary need for at least two alternative water channels to tune the P450 nanomachine, so it can complete the two steps of the protonation and form ultimately compound I.

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