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Crystallographic snapshots of ternary complexes of thermophilic secondary alcohol dehydrogenase from Thermoanaerobacter pseudoethanolicus reveal the dynamics of ligand exchange and the proton relay network.

Tung DinhK Troy RahnRobert S Phillips
Published in: Proteins (2022)
Three-dimensional structures of I86A and C295A mutant secondary alcohol dehydrogenase (SADH) from Thermoanaerobacter pseudoethanolicus were determined by x-ray crystallography. The tetrameric structure of C295A-SADH soaked with NADP + and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was determined to 1.85 Å with an R free of 0.225. DMSO is bound to the tetrahedral zinc in each subunit, with ligands from SG of Cys-37, NE2 of His-59, and OD2 of Asp-150. The nicotinamide ring of NADP is hydrogen-bonded to the N of Ala-295 and the O of Val-265 and Gly-293. The O of DMSO is connected to a network of hydrogen bonds with OG of Ser-39, the 3'-OH of NADP, and ND1 of His-42. The structure of I86A-SADH soaked with 2-pentanol and NADP + contains (R)-2-pentanol bound in each subunit, ligated to the tetrahedral zinc, and connected to the proton relay network. The structure of I86A-SADH soaked with 3-methylcyclohexanol and NADP + has alcohol bound in three subunits. Two of the sites have the alcohol ligated to the zinc in an axial position, with OE2 of Glu-60 in the other axial position of a trigonal bipyramidal complex. One site has 3-methylcyclohexanol bound noncovalently, with the zinc in an inverted tetrahedral geometry with Glu-60. The fourth site also has the zinc in a trigonal bipyramidal complex with axial Glu-60 and water ligands. These structures demonstrate that ligand exchange of SADH involves pentacoordinate and inverted zinc complexes with Glu-60. Furthermore, we see a network of hydrogen bonds connecting the substrate oxygen to the external solvent that is likely to play a role in the mechanism of SADH.
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