Active-Site Oxygen Accessibility and Catalytic Loop Dynamics of Plant Aromatic Amino Acid Decarboxylases from Molecular Simulations.
Yitao GouTianjie LiYi WangPublished in: Biochemistry (2024)
Aromatic amino acid decarboxylases (AAADs) are pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymes that catalyze the decarboxylation of aromatic amino acid l-amino acids. In plants, apart from canonical AAADs that catalyze the straightforward decarboxylation reaction, other members of the AAAD family function as aromatic acetaldehyde synthases (AASs) and catalyze more complex decarboxylation-dependent oxidative deamination. The interconversion between a canonical AAAD and an AAS can be achieved by a single tyrosine-phenylalanine mutation in the large catalytic loop of the enzymes. In this work, we report implicit ligand sampling (ILS) calculations of the canonical l-tyrosine decarboxylase from Papaver somniferum ( Ps TyDC) that catalyzes l-tyrosine decarboxylation and its Y350F mutant that instead catalyzes the decarboxylation-dependent oxidative deamination of the same substrate. Through comparative analysis of the resulting three-dimensional (3D) O 2 free energy profiles, we evaluate the impact of the key tyrosine/phenylalanine mutation on oxygen accessibility to both the wild type and Y350F mutant of Ps TyDC. Additionally, using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the l-tryptophan decarboxylase from Catharanthus roseus ( Cr TDC), we further investigate the dynamics of a large catalytic loop known to be indispensable to all AAADs. Results of our ILS and MD calculations shed new light on how key structural elements and loop conformational dynamics underlie the enzymatic functions of different members of the plant AAAD family.