Introduction of d-Amino Acids in Minimalistic Peptide Substrates by an S-Adenosyl-l-Methionine Radical Epimerase.
Anna Lisa VagstadTakefumi KuranagaSalome PüntenerVijaya R PattabiramanJeffrey W BodeJörn PielPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Post-translational modifying enzymes from the S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) radical superfamily garner attention due to their ability to accomplish challenging biochemical reactions. Among them, a family of AdoMet radical epimerases catalyze irreversible l- to d-amino acid transformations of diverse residues, including 18 sites in the complex sponge-derived polytheonamide toxins. Herein, the in vitro activity of the model epimerase OspD is reported and its catalytic mechanism and substrate flexibility is investigated. The wild-type enzyme was capable of leader-independent epimerization of not only the stand-alone core peptide, but also truncated and cyclic core variants. Introduction of d-amino acids can drastically alter the stability, structure, and activity of peptides; thus, epimerases offer opportunities in peptide bioengineering.