4.5 Article

Characterization of a catalytic ligand bridging metal ions in phosphodiesterases 4 and 5 by molecular dynamics simulations and hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 91, Issue 5, Pages 1858-1867

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1529/biophysj.106.086835

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Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (PDEs) constitute a large superfamily of enzymes regulating concentrations of intracellular second messengers cAMP and cGMP through PDE-catalyzed hydrolysis. Although three-dimensional x-ray crystal structures of PDE4 and PDE5 have been reported, it is uncertain whether a critical, second bridging ligand (BL2) in the active site is H2O or HO- because hydrogen atoms cannot be determined by x-ray diffraction. The identity of BL2 is theoretically determined by performing molecular dynamics simulations and hybrid quantum mechanical/ molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations, for the first time, on the protein structures resolved by x-ray diffraction. The computational results con. rm our previous suggestion, which was based on QM calculations on a simplified active site model, that BL2 in PDE4 should be HO-, rather than H2O, serving as the nucleophile to initialize the catalytic hydrolysis of cAMP. The molecular dynamics simulations and QM/MM calculations on PDE5 demonstrate for the first time that the BL2 in PDE5 should also be HO- rather than H2O as proposed in recently published reports on the x-ray crystal structures, which serves as the nucleophile to initialize the PDE5-catalyzed hydrolysis of cGMP. These fundamental structural insights provide a rational basis for future structure-based drug design targeting PDEs.

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