3-Deoxy-d-arabinoheptulosonate-7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase catalyzes the first step in the shikimate pathway. It catalyzes an aldol-like reaction of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) with erythrose 4-phosphate (E4P) to form DAHP. The kinetic mechanism was rapid equilibrium sequential ordered ter ter, with the essential divalent metal ion, Mn, binding first, followed by PEP and E4P. DAHP oxime, in which an oxime group replaces the keto oxygen, was a potent inhibitor, with K = 1.5 ± 0.4 μM, though with residual activity at high inhibitor concentrations. It displayed slow-binding inhibition with a residence time, t, of 83 min. The crystal structure revealed that the oxime functional group, combined with two crystallographic waters, bound at the same location in the catalytic center as the phosphate group of the tetrahedral intermediate. DAHP synthase has a dimer-of-dimers homotetrameric structure, and DAHP oxime bound to only one subunit of each tight dimer. Inhibitor binding was competitive with respect to all three substrates in the subunits to which it bound. DAHP oxime did not overlap with the metal binding site, so the cause of their mutually exclusive binding was not clear. Similarly, there was no obvious structural reason for inhibitor binding in only two subunits; however, changes in global hydrogen/deuterium exchange showed large scale changes in protein dynamics upon inhibitor binding. The k value for the residual activity at high inhibitor concentrations was 3-fold lower, and the apparent K value decreased at least 10-fold. This positive cooperativity of binding between DAHP oxime in subunits B and C, and E4P in subunits A and D appears to be the dominant cause for incomplete inhibition at high inhibitor concentrations. In spite of its lack of obvious structural similarity to phosphate, the oxime and crystallographic waters acted as a small, neutral phosphate mimic.
This work introduces an integrated microfluidic device for measuring rapid H/D exchange (HDX) in proteins. By monitoring backbone amide HDX on the millisecond to low second time scale, we are able to characterize conformational dynamics in weakly structured regions, such as loops and molten globule-like domains that are inaccessible in conventional HDX experiments. The device accommodates the entire MS-based HDX workflow on a single chip with residence times sufficiently small (ca. 8 s) that back-exchange is negligible (≤5%), even without cooling. Components include an adjustable position capillary mixer providing a variable-time labeling pulse, a static mixer for HDX quenching, a proteolytic microreactor for rapid protein digestion, and on-chip electrospray ionization (ESI). In the present work, we characterize device performance using three model systems, each illustrating a different application of 'time-resolved' HDX. Ubiquitin is used to illustrate a crude, high throughput structural analysis based on a single subsecond HDX time-point. In experiments using cytochrome c, we distinguish dynamic behavior in loops, establishing a link between flexibility and interactions with the heme prosthetic group. Finally, we localize an unusually high 'burst-phase' of HDX in the large tetrameric enzyme DAHP synthase to a 'molten globule-like' region surrounding the active site.
Background: OXA-58 is a carbapenem-hydrolyzing class D -lactamase (CHDL) found in Acinetobacter baumannii. Results: OXA-58 exploits a carbamylated lysine in its catalysis. The deacylating water molecule comes from the ␣-face. Conclusion: CHDLs employ the same hydrolytic machinery as oxacillinases. Structural changes in the active site may lead to imipenem hydrolysis. Significance: This study provides insights for the design of CHDL inactivators.
3-Deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate (DAHP) synthase catalyzes an aldol-like reaction of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) with erythrose 4-phosphate (E4P) to form DAHP in the first step of the shikimate biosynthetic pathway. DAHP oxime, in which an oxime replaces the ketone, is a potent inhibitor, with K = 1.5 μM. Linear free energy relationship (LFER) analysis of DAHP oxime inhibition using DAHP synthase mutants revealed an excellent correlation between transition state stabilization and inhibition. The equations of LFER analysis were rederived to formalize the possibility of proportional, rather than equal, changes in the free energies of transition state stabilization and inhibitor binding, in accord with the fact that the majority of LFER analyses in the literature demonstrate nonunity slopes. A slope of unity, m = 1, indicates that catalysis and inhibitor binding are equally sensitive to perturbations such as mutations or modified inhibitor/substrate structures. Slopes <1 or >1 indicate that inhibitor binding is less sensitive or more sensitive, respectively, to perturbations than is catalysis. LFER analysis using the tetramolecular specificity constant, that is, plotting log(KKK/k) versus log(K), revealed a slope, m, of 0.34, with r = 0.93. This provides evidence that DAHP oxime is mimicking the first irreversible transition state of the DAHP synthase reaction, presumably phosphate departure from the tetrahedral intermediate. This is evidence that the oxime group can act as a functional, as well as structural, mimic of phosphate groups.
3-Deoxy-d- manno-2-octulosonate-8-phosphate (KDO8P) synthase catalyzes the first step of lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis, namely condensation of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) with arabinose 5-phosphate (A5P), to produce KDO8P. We have characterized Campylobacter jejuni KDO8P synthase and its inhibition by KDO8P oxime. It was metal-dependent and homotetrameric and followed a rapid equilibrium sequential ordered ter ter kinetic mechanism in which Mn bound first, followed by PEP and then A5P. It was inhibited by KDO8P oxime, an analogue of 3-deoxy-d- arabino-heptulosonate 7-phosphate (DAHP) oxime, a transition-state mimic of DAHP synthase. Inhibition was uncompetitive-like with respect to Mn and competitive with respect to PEP and A5P. It displayed both fast-binding inhibition ( K = 10 μM) and slow-binding inhibition ( K* = 0.57 μM). The residence times on the enzyme ( t) ranged from 27 min in the absence of free inhibitor to 69 h with excess inhibitor. The dependence of t on the free inhibitor concentration suggested intersubunit communication within the homotetramer between high- and low-affinity sites. This confirms the generality of the oxime functional group, a small, neutral phosphate bioisostere, as an α-carboxyketose synthase inhibitor and highlights the challenge that intersubunit communication poses to effective inhibition.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.