One of the ultimate objectives of de novo protein design is to realize systems capable of catalyzing redox reactions on substrates. This goal is challenging as redox-active proteins require design considerations for both the reduced and oxidized states of the protein. In this paper, we describe the spectroscopic characterization and catalytic activity of a de novo designed metallopeptide Cu(I/II)(TRIL23H) 3 +/2+ , where Cu(I/II) is embeded in α-helical coiled coils, as a model for the Cu T2 center of copper nitrite reductase. In Cu(I/II)(TRIL23H) 3 +/2+ , Cu(I) is coordinated to three histidines, as indicated by X-ray absorption data, and Cu(II) to three histidines and one or two water molecules. Both ions are bound in the interior of the three-stranded coiled coils with affinities that range from nano- to micromolar [Cu(II)], and picomolar [Cu(I)]. The Cu(His) 3 active site is characterized in both oxidation states, revealing similarities to the Cu T2 site in the natural enzyme. The species Cu(II)(TRIL23H) 3 2+ in aqueous solution can be reduced to Cu(I)(TRIL23H) 3 + using ascorbate, and reoxidized by nitrite with production of nitric oxide. At pH 5.8, with an excess of both the reductant (ascorbate) and the substrate (nitrite), the copper peptide Cu(II)(TRIL23H) 3 2+ acts as a catalyst for the reduction of nitrite with at least five turnovers and no loss of catalytic efficiency after 3.7 h. The catalytic activity, which is first order in the concentration of the peptide, also shows a pH dependence that is described and discussed.
Enzymatic reactions involving redox processes are highly sensitive to the local electrostatic environment. Despite considerable effort, the complex interactions between different influential factors in native proteins impede progress towards complete understanding of the structure-function relationship. Of particular interest is the type 2 copper center Cu(His)3, which may act as an electron transfer center in peptidylglycine α-hydroxylating monooxygenase (PHM) or a catalytic center in copper nitrite reductase (CuNiR). A de novo design strategy is used to probe the effect of modifying charged amino acid residues around, but not directly bound to, a Cu(His)3 center embedded in three-stranded coiled coils (TRI-H)3 [TRI-H = Ac-G WKALEEK LKALEEK LKALEEK HKALEEK G-NH2]. Specifically, the peptide TRI-EH [TRI-EH = TRI-HK22E] alters an important lysine to glutamate just above the copper binding center. With a series of TRI-EH peptides mutated below the metal center, we use a variety of spectroscopies (EPR, UV-Vis, XAS) to show a direct impact on the protonation equilibria, copper binding affinities, reduction potentials and nitrite reductase activities of these copper-peptide complexes. The potentials at a specific pH vary by 100 mV and nitrite reductase activity ranges over a factor of four in rates. We also observe that affinities, potentials and catalytic activities are strongly influenced by pH conditions (pH 5.8 ~ 7.4). In general, Cu(II) affinities for the peptides are diminished at low pH values. The interplay between these factors can lead to a 200 mV shift in reduction potentials across these peptides, which is determined by the pH-dependent affinities of copper in both oxidation states. This study illustrates the strength of de novo protein design in elucidating the influence of ionizable residues on a particular redox system, an important step towards understanding the factors that govern the properties of this metalloenzyme with a goal of eventually improving the catalytic activity.
The binding of the substrate analogue methanol to the catalytic Mn4CaO5 cluster of the water-oxidizing enzyme photosystem II is known to alter the electronic structure properties of the oxygen-evolving complex without retarding O2-evolution under steady-state illumination conditions. We report the binding mode of 13C-labeled methanol determined using 9.4 GHz (X-band) hyperfine sublevel-correlation (HYSCORE) and 34 GHz (Q-band) electron spin–echo electron nuclear double resonance (ESE-ENDOR) spectroscopies. These results are compared to analogous experiments on a mixed-valence Mn(III)Mn(IV) complex (2-OH-3,5-Cl2-salpn)2Mn(III)Mn-(IV) (salpn = N,N′-bis(3,5-dichlorosalicylidene)-1,3-diamino-2-hydrox-ypropane) in which methanol ligates to the Mn(III) ion (Larson et al. (1992) J. Am. Chem. Soc., 114, 6263). In the mixed-valence Mn(III,IV) complex, the hyperfine coupling to the 13C of the bound methanol (Aiso = 0.65 MHz, T = 1.25 MHz) is appreciably larger than that observed for 13C methanol associated with the Mn4CaO5 cluster poised in the S2 state, where only a weak dipolar hyperfine interaction (Aiso = 0.05 MHz, T = 0.27 MHz) is observed. An evaluation of the 13C hyperfine interaction using the X-ray structure coordinates of the Mn4CaO5 cluster indicates that methanol does not bind as a terminal ligand to any of the manganese ions in the oxygen-evolving complex. We favor methanol binding in place of a water ligand to the Ca2+ in the Mn4CaO5 cluster or in place of one of the waters that form hydrogen bonds with the oxygen bridges of the cluster.
Protein design is a useful strategy to interrogate the protein structure-function relationship. We demonstrate using a highly modular 3-stranded Coiled Coil (TRI-peptide system) that a functional type 2 copper center exhibiting copper nitrite reductase (NiR) activity exhibits the highest homogeneous catalytic efficiency under aqueous conditions for the reduction of nitrite to NO and H2O. Modification of the amino acids in the second coordination sphere of the copper center increases the nitrite reductase activity up to 75-fold compared to previously reported systems. We find also that steric bulk can be used to enforce a three-coordinate CuI in a site, which tends toward two-coordination with decreased steric bulk. This study demonstrates the importance of the second coordination sphere environment both for controlling metal center ligation and enhancing the catalytic efficiency of metalloenzymes and their analogues.
The ultrafast dynamics of a de novo metalloenzyme active site is monitored using two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy. The homotrimer of parallel, coiled coil α-helices contains a His3-Cu(I) metal site where CO is bound and serves as a vibrational probe of the hydrophobic interior of the self-assembled complex. The ultrafast spectral dynamics of Cu-CO reveals unprecedented ultrafast (2 ps) nonequilibrium structural rearrangements launched by vibrational excitation of CO. This initial rapid phase is followed by much slower ~40 ps vibrational relaxation typical of metal-CO vibrations in natural proteins. To identify the hidden coupled coordinate, small molecule analogues and the full peptide were studied by QM and QM/MM calculations, respectively. The calculations show that variation of the histidines’ dihedral angles in coordinating Cu controls the coupling between the CO stretch and the Cu–C–O bending coordinates. Analysis of different optimized structures with significantly different electrostatic field magnitudes at the CO ligand site indicates that the origin of the stretch–bend coupling is not directly due to through-space electrostatics. Instead, the large, ~3.6 D dipole moments of the histidine side chains effectively transduce the electrostatic environment to the local metal coordination orientation. The sensitivity of the first coordination sphere to the protein electrostatics and its role in altering the potential energy surface of the bound ligands suggests that long-range electrostatics can be leveraged to fine-tune function through enzyme design.
Copper proteins have the capacity to serve as both redox active catalysts and purely electron transfer centers. A longstanding question in this field is how the function of histidine ligated Cu centers are modulated by δ vs ε-nitrogen ligation of the imidazole. Evaluating the impact of these coordination modes on structure and function by comparative analysis of deposited crystal structures is confounded by factors such as differing protein folds and disparate secondary coordination spheres that make direct comparison of these isomers difficult. Here, we present a series of de novo designed proteins using the noncanonical amino acids 1-methyl-histidine and 3methyl-histidine to create Cu nitrite reductases where δor ε-nitrogen ligation is enforced by the opposite nitrogen's methylation as a means of directly comparing these two ligation states in the same protein fold. We find that ε-nitrogen ligation allows for a better nitrite reduction catalyst, displaying 2 orders of magnitude higher activity than the δ-nitrogen ligated construct. Methylation of the δ nitrogen, combined with a secondary sphere mutation we have previously published, has produced a new record for efficiency within a homogeneous aqueous system, improving by 1 order of magnitude the previously published most efficient construct. Furthermore, we have measured Michaelis-Menten kinetics on these highly active constructs, revealing that the remaining barriers to matching the catalytic efficiency (k cat /K M) of native Cu nitrite reductase involve both substrate binding (K M) and catalysis (k cat).
Oxidative post-translational modifications affect the structure and function of many biomolecules. Herein we examine the biophysical and functional consequences of oxidative post-translational. modifications to human calprotectin (CP, S100A8/S100A9 oligomer, MRP8/MRP14 oligomer, calgranulins A/B oligomer). This abundant metal-sequestering protein contributes to the innate immunity by starving invading microbial pathogens of transition metal nutrients in the extracellular space. It also participates in the inflammatory response. Despite many decades of study, little is known about the fate of CP at sites of infection and inflammation. We present compelling evidence for methionine oxidation of CP in vivo, supported by using 15N-labeled CP-Ser (S100A8(C42S)/S100A9(C3S)) to monitor for adventitious oxidation following human sample collection. To elucidate the biochemical and functional consequences of oxidative post-translational modifications, we examine recombinant CP-Ser with methionine sulfoxide modifications generated by exposing the protein to hydrogen peroxide. These oxidized species coordinate transition metal ions and exert antibacterial activity. Nevertheless, oxidation of M81 in the S100A9 subunit disrupts Ca(II)-induced tetramerization and, in the absence of a transition metal ion bound at the His6 site, accelerates proteolytic degradation of CP. We demonstrate that native CP, which contains one Cys residue in each full-length subunit, forms disulfide bonds within and between S100A8/S100A9 heterodimers when exposed to hydrogen peroxide. Remarkably, disulfide bond formation accelerates proteolytic degradation of CP. We propose a new extension to the working model for extracellular CP where post-translational oxidation by reactive oxygen species generated during the neutrophil oxidative burst modulates its lifetime in the extracellular space.
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