4.7 Article

Molecular Lego of Human Cytochrome P450: The Key Role of Heme Domain Flexibility for the Activity of the Chimeric Proteins

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23073618

Keywords

aromatase; BMR; stability; flexibility; chimerization

Funding

  1. Compagnia di San Paolo, Bando Ex-Post per Progetti di Ricerca di Ateneo, Torino, Italy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study further characterized the 3A4-BMR chimera using differential scanning calorimetry and evaluated the stabilizing role of BMR. The fusion to BMR was found to have a significant effect on thermal stability but a minimal effect on catalytic activity. Different linker loop lengths had an impact on both activity and stability of the chimera, highlighting the importance of careful design and evaluation of P450-BMR chimeras.
The cytochrome P450 superfamily are heme-thiolate enzymes able to carry out monooxygenase reactions. Several studies have demonstrated the feasibility of using a soluble bacterial reductase from Bacillus megaterium, BMR, as an artificial electron transfer partner fused to the human P450 domain in a single polypeptide chain in an approach known as 'molecular Lego'. The 3A4-BMR chimera has been deeply characterized biochemically for its activity, coupling efficiency, and flexibility by many different biophysical techniques leading to the conclusion that an extension of five glycines in the loop that connects the two domains improves all the catalytic parameters due to improved flexibility of the system. In this work, we extend the characterization of 3A4-BMR chimeras using differential scanning calorimetry to evaluate stabilizing role of BMR. We apply the 'molecular Lego' approach also to CYP19A1 (aromatase) and the data show that the activity of the chimeras is very low (<0.003 min(-1)) for all the constructs tested with a different linker loop length: ARO-BMR, ARO-BMR-3GLY, and ARO-BMR-5GLY. Nevertheless, the fusion to BMR shows a remarkable effect on thermal stability studied by differential scanning calorimetry as indicated by the increase in T-onset by 10 degrees C and the presence of a cooperative unfolding process driven by the BMR protein domain. Previously characterized 3A4-BMR constructs show the same behavior of ARO-BMR constructs in terms of thermal stabilization but a higher activity as a function of the loop length. A comparison of the ARO-BMR system to 3A4-BMR indicates that the design of each P450-BMR chimera should be carefully evaluated not only in terms of electron transfer, but also for the biophysical constraints that cannot always be overcome by chimerization.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available