4.4 Article

Substrate-Triggered Formation and Remarkable Stability of the C-H Bond-Cleaving Chloroferryl Intermediate in the Aliphatic Halogenase, SyrB2

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 48, Issue 20, Pages 4331-4343

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi900109z

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM-20011, GM-49338, GM-69657]
  2. National Science Foundation [MCB-642058, MCB-47676]
  3. Beckman Foundation
  4. Dreyfus Foundation
  5. Helen Flay Whitney Foundation
  6. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  7. Department of Energy
  8. Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  9. National Institutes of Health
  10. National Center for Research Resources
  11. Biomedical Technology Program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Aliphatic halogenases activate O-2, cleave alpha-ketoglutarate (alpha KG) to CO2 and succinate, and form haloferryl [X-Fe(IV)=O; X = Cl or Br] complexes that cleave aliphatic C-H bonds to Install halogens during the biosynthesis of natural products by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPSs). For the related alpha KG-dependent dioxygenases, it has been shown that reaction of the Fe(II) cofactor with O-2 to form the C-H bond-cleaving ferry] complex is triggered by binding of the target substrate. In this study, we have tested for and defined structural determinants of substrate triggering (ST) in the halogenase, SyrB2, from the syringomycin E biosynthetic NRPS of Pseudomonas syringae B301 D. As for other halogenases, the substrate of SyrB2 is complex, consisting of L-Thr tethered via a thioester linkage to a covalently bound phosphopantetheine (PPant) cofactor of a carrier protein, SyrB L Without an appended amino acid, SyrB I does not trigger formation of the chloroferryl intermediate state in SyrB2, even in the presence of free L-Thr or its analogues, but SyrB I charged either by L-Thr (L-Thr-S-SyrB1) or by any of several non-native amino acids does trigger the reaction by as much as 8000-fold (for the native substrate). Triggering efficacy is sensitive to the structures of both the amino acid and the carrier protein, being diminished by 5-24-fold when the native L-Thr is replaced with another amino acid and by similar to 40-fold when SyrB1 is replaced with the heterologous carrier protein, CytC2. The directing effect of the carrier protein and consequent tolerance for profound modifications to the target amino acid allow the chloroferryl state to be formed in the presence of substrates that perturb the ratio of its two putative coordination isomers, lack the target C-H bond (L-Ala-S-SyrB1), or contain a C-H bond of enhanced strength (L-Cyclopropylglycyl-S-SyrB 1). For the latter two cases, the SyrB2 chloroferryl state so formed exhibits unprecedented stability (t(1/2) = 30-110 min at 0 degrees C), can be trapped at high concentration and purity by manual freezing without a cryosolvent, and represents an ideal target for structural characterization. As initial steps toward this goal, extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy has been used to determine the Fe-O and Fe-Cl distances and density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been used to confirm that the measured distances are consistent with the anticipated structure of the intermediate.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available