4.5 Article

Substrate diffusion and oxidation in GMC oxidoreductases: an experimental and computational study on fungal aryl-alcohol oxidase

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 436, Issue -, Pages 341-350

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20102090

Keywords

aryl-alcohol oxidase (AAO); catalytic base; glucose-methanol-choline oxidase (GMC) oxidoreductase; molecular docking; quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM); reaction mechanism

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministries of Education and Science [CTQ2007-62122]
  2. Spanish Ministries of Science and Innovation [BIO2010-1493, BIO2008-01533]
  3. European Union [NMP2-CT-2006-026456 (BIORENEW), KBBE-2010-4-265397 (PEROXICATS)]
  4. Comunidad de Madrid
  5. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
  6. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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AAO (aryl-alcohol oxidase) provides H2O2 in fungal degradation of lignin, a process of high biotechnological interest. The crystal structure of AAO does not show open access to the active site, where different aromatic alcohols are oxidized. In the present study we investigated substrate diffusion and oxidation in AAO compared with the structurally related CHO (choline oxidase). Cavity finder and ligand diffusion simulations indicate the substrate-entrance channel, requiring side-chain displacements and involving a stacking interaction with Tyr(92). Mixed QM (quantum mechanics)/MM (molecular mechanics) studies combined with site-directed mutagenesis showed two active-site catalytic histidine residues, whose substitution strongly decreased both catalytic and transient-state reduction constants for p-anisyl alcohol in the H502A (over 1800-fold) and H546A (over 35-fold) variants. Combination of QM/MM energy profiles, protonation predictors, molecular dynamics, mutagenesis and pH profiles provide a robust answer regarding the nature of the catalytic base. The histidine residue in front of the FAD ring, AAO His(502) (and CHO His(466)), acts as a base. For the two substrates assayed, it was shown that proton transfer preceded hydride transfer, although both processes are highly coupled. No stable intermediate was observed in the energy profiles, in contrast with that observed for CHO. QM/MM, together with solvent KIE (kinetic isotope effect) results, suggest a non-synchronous concerted mechanism for alcohol oxidation by AAO.

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