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A De Novo-Designed Type 3 Copper Protein Tunes Catechol Substrate Recognition and Reactivity.

Fabio PirroSalvatore La GattaFederica ArrigoniAntonino FamulariOrnella MaglioPompea Del VecchioMario ChiesaLuca De GioiaLuca BertiniMarco ChinoFlavia NastriAngelina Lombardi
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
De novo metalloprotein design is a remarkable approach to shape protein scaffolds toward specific functions. Here, we report the design and characterization of Due Rame 1 (DR1), a de novo designed protein housing a di-copper site and mimicking the Type 3 (T3) copper-containing polyphenol oxidases (PPOs). To achieve this goal, we hierarchically designed the first and the second di-metal coordination spheres to engineer the di-copper site into a simple four-helix bundle scaffold. Spectroscopic, thermodynamic, and functional characterization revealed that DR1 recapitulates the T3 copper site, supporting different copper redox states, and being active in the O 2 -dependent oxidation of catechols to o-quinones. Careful design of the residues lining the substrate access site endows DR1 with substrate recognition, as revealed by Hammet analysis and computational studies on substituted catechols. This study represents a premier example in the construction of a functional T3 copper site into a designed four-helix bundle protein.
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